The new certifications for HDMI cables are now slowly coming onto the market. Known as Gen 2, these certifications will provide verification for the authenticity of a given cable and gradually replace the first generation certifications.
This formally began in May 2023, but the HDMI Licensing Administrator (HDMI LA) has allowed the old labels to continue to be used until stocks of the corresponding cables have all been sold. In its February newsletter, cable manufacturer Club3D drew attention to this change and stated that it is currently changing its label fulfillment provider, so packs with both the old and the new certifications will soon appear in stores.
The new certification has the advantage that it can be checked more easily. According to the HDMI LA, a simple scan of the QR code on the pack is enough to verify its authenticity. The old verification, on the other hand, required the proprietary HDMI app.
Is every QR code individually serialized? What’s the mechanism to verify authenticity?
I know Der8auer uses individually printed one time use codes that can be used to verify thermal grizzly paste authenticity
A simple QR code w/hologram ain’t gonna do shit alone. Fuck I didn’t even know HDMI had their own app and I’ve been building computers for 20+ years at this point
Sounds like it’s time to give the HDMI standard out to the public domain.
DisplayPort?
Sadly they’re not doing as well…
Considering most GPU ship with 3DP and only 1 HDMI I’d say you’re wrong
Gigabyte is the exception, 3 HDMI and 1 DP
I hate that, all my other devices use HDMI.
None of my DP ports have been used.
Except for the one I plugged a DP to HDMI adaptor in because my GPU only has one bloody HDMI.
I haven’t used HDMI since about 2017 (1060 6gb) and IIRC I even used DP on my 660 TI PE
Are ya exclusively using TV’s?
Displayport sucks.
The connector is so brittle and long, it breaks too easily compared to HDMI.
And it is not like DP has features that HDMI doesn’t.
The whole point of HDMI is HDCP which is necessarily very much proprietary. HDMI is a product of the film & TV industries to protect their “intellectual property”. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI
HDMI isn’t necessary for HDCP though. HDCP also works over DisplayPort and even DVI.
Edit: The HDMI article on Wikipedia that you linked even says: