But during that time computers moved from VGA analogue migrated to DVI, HDMI and Displayport, which are a kind of separate set of standards for digital video transmission. In the years that have followed, SDI has gone through a huge leap in video bandwidths from ~270Mb/s for the original SD cards, up to now ~12Gb/s. I'd go further and, suggest it relates to BMDs origins, and their early products, specifically: SDI Decklink cards, which were all about allowing computers access to SMPTE spec video. You of course understand this question cannot and will not be answered!! Only BMD could answer this question, and the guys at BMD that do post here, won't have a true answer to this just a party line of "our products support SMPTE standards as detailed on our specs pages". Router connections preserved and restored instantly at power onġ9.00 x 1.73 x 6.30" (48.26 x 4.39 x 16.Eric Holmberg wrote:So my question is Why cant BMD Suport none smite standards in HDMI-SDI products? I would make mine and so many others life so much easier! Router control included free for Windows and Mac OS X Video payload identification ancillary data as per SMPTE 352M On all SDI outputs, auto switching between SD, HD, or 6G-SDI video Via front panel LCD or use either RJ45 Ethernet USB 2.0 high speed (480 Mb/s) interface or via EthernetĦ buttons and scroll wheel for control of LCD displayġ x RS-422 input for controlling router crosspoint switching Simultaneous routing of 4K, HD, SD video and DVB-ASI
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