|  | Posted by dmaster on 11/14/06 16:07 
Guest wrote:....
 > Even is the cables(transmission) themselves are made of better materials for
 > transmission?
 ....
 
 As long as we are talking about digital transmissions, until the
 quality of the cable falls so low that bits (smallest unit of
 information) start getting corrupted, there will be no difference
 what-so-ever.
 
 And refering back to an ealier post by you where you stated that the
 artifacts you saw were "film artifacts" not "digital artifacts":  The
 information between the two ends of an HDMI or optical audio cable *is*
 a digital transmission.  The only kind of artifacts you can possibly
 introduce are the "digital artifacts" you claim you didn't see.
 
 You've got to understand, in old analogue systems, the information is
 encoded in the amplitude and frequency of a wave.  Anything that
 changes the wave changes the information.  Should the change be large
 enough, a human may notice.  Digital is not like that at all.  The wave
 has only two distinct values, not a continuum.  To cause an error, you
 need enough interference to change one value into the other.  What that
 has done, in effect, is corrupted a byte in the data stream.  The
 change is as likely to be a huge change as a small change.  If data
 correction does not detect and correct the error, then a "digital
 artifact" occurs.  Once again, unlike an analogue media, where
 corruption can effect primarily the high frequency components, of the
 high power components, etc... digital artifacts are equally likely
 anywhere.  You are most likely going to see (or hear) a rather gross
 effect, like macro-blocking.  It is completely unlikely that the
 artifacting will be "to generally preserve less detail" or "change the
 realism of ground textures" or anything like that at all.
 
 Dan (Woj...)
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