HDMI2.1to DisplayPort1.4 Active adapter

> All of the analyses showed that the DSC algorithm outperformed five other proprietary algorithms on these picture quality tests, and was either visually lossless or very nearly so for all tested images at 8 bits/pixel.[1] http://www.vesa.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/VESA_DSC-ETP2...

The latest HDMI standard can do 4096x2160 60Hz in deep color (12 bits per color).DisplayPort 1.4 has a higher maximum bandwidth than HDMI 2.0 (31.4 Gbps vs 18Gbps). This allows it to do 120Hz, deep color/HDR or carry multiple 4K streams (multiple monitors or 3D) on one cable. It's by far the most advanced standard out there for consumer video transmission.Source: I'm an engineer working with video systems, and Wikipedia

HDMI2.1to DisplayPortadapter120Hz

Advantages over other standards: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DisplayPort#Advantages_over_DV...Also, another major advantage - USB Type-C compatibility (http://www.displayport.org/what-is-displayport-over-usb-c/)

DisplayPort 1.4 has a higher maximum bandwidth than HDMI 2.0 (31.4 Gbps vs 18Gbps). This allows it to do 120Hz, deep color/HDR or carry multiple 4K streams (multiple monitors or 3D) on one cable. It's by far the most advanced standard out there for consumer video transmission.Source: I'm an engineer working with video systems, and Wikipedia

Besthdmi to displayport 4k 120hz 12ft

A major advantage of optical is that there are no EMV problems and that you are electrically decoupled (e.g. no hum loops). This might be one of the reasons why toslink is optical. For displays ground loops are typically no problem compared to amplifiers/speakers.

Hdmi to displayport 4k 120hz 12ftamazon

Dual link DVI is significantly old-hat compared to the newer DisplayPort and HDMI standards. A single dual link DVI cable can carry either half a 4K frame (1920x2160) at 8 bits per color, 60hz, OR a single 1080p frame at 10 bits per color, 60hz. To get a 4K 60hz display running you need to use two dual link DVI cables, which is insanely bulky. Plus you at best get 8 bit color out of it, and no audio.The latest HDMI standard can do 4096x2160 60Hz in deep color (12 bits per color).DisplayPort 1.4 has a higher maximum bandwidth than HDMI 2.0 (31.4 Gbps vs 18Gbps). This allows it to do 120Hz, deep color/HDR or carry multiple 4K streams (multiple monitors or 3D) on one cable. It's by far the most advanced standard out there for consumer video transmission.Source: I'm an engineer working with video systems, and Wikipedia

Their press statements it's visually transparent, but the technical overview[1] says this:> All of the analyses showed that the DSC algorithm outperformed five other proprietary algorithms on these picture quality tests, and was either visually lossless or very nearly so for all tested images at 8 bits/pixel.[1] http://www.vesa.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/VESA_DSC-ETP2...