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Product Description Mini DisplayPort makes a great companion for your Mac, PC or tablet equipped with Mini DisplayPort. This adapter allows you to connect your device to an external display such as high definition monitor, projector or LCD without the hassle of an additional HDMI cable. With HDMI, you can now project audio, video or images directly from your Mac, PC or tablet to your external display. Features and Specifications: Input: Mini DisplayPort (Male) x 1. Output: HDMI (Male) x 1. Supports HDMI high definition resolution up to 1080p@60Hz. Connects from Mini DisplayPort to HDMI. This is not a bi-directional adapter. Note: Apple devices released before April 2010 do not support audio out and will not transmit sound from Mini DisplayPort. Mini DisplayPort that supports both audio and video is only available on Apple devices that are released after April 2010. Please make sure your device is compatible before purchasing this product. Features: Connects Mini DisplayPort/Thunderbolt (male) to HDMI (male). Converts audio and video to any device display enabled with HDMI technology. Supports high definition resolution up to 1080p@60Hz. Easy plug-and-play function. Compatibility: MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, MacBook Pro with Retina Display, iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Pro. Microsoft Surface Pro / Pro 2 / Pro 3. Lenovo ThinkPad X1, X1 Carbon, Helix, X230, L430, L530, T430s, T430, T530, W530. Satellite Pro S500, Tecra M11, A11, and S11. HP Envy 14, Envy 17. Dell XPS 14, 15, and 17.
The mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter lets you connect a high definition monitor, projector, or LCD that uses a HDMI connector or cable to a MacBook, MacBook Pro, or MacBook Air with a mini DisplayPort
Adapter only works with laptops with Mini DisplayPort, please check with your device's output specification before placing order
Support Mini DisplayPort 1.1a input and HDMI 1.3b output. HDMI highest video resolution 1080p. HDMI 225 MHz / 2.25 Gbps per channel (6.75Gbps all channel) bandwidth. HDMI 12 bit per channel (36 bit all channel) deep color.
Uncompressed audio such as LPCM. Compressed audio such as DTS Digital, Dolby Digital include: DTS-HD and Dolby True HD
Compatible With: Apple: iMac, Mac Mini, Mac Pro, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro 13 inch, MacBook Pro
Update on 9/29/2016I still have the cable, as well as my MacBook. The cable works very well since they day I got it. I've connected this to 4 different brands of TVs, all project well and the sound is great as well.The fact I still have the cable still shocks me, it has outlived about 10 iPhone charger cables. So I'm very impressed with the quality.Update On 2/6/2012:When I Originally wrote this review I had the 2011 Early MacBook Pro Model(one without the Thunderbolt port which Mac started to sell late February) With Snow leopard Mac OS X v10.6.I still have the same MacBook as well as the Cable that still works wonderfully. I've upgraded to Lion so the Original post is more directed towards those who have Snow Leopard, because in Lion they change a couple of features on how to locate the HDMI Audio.The port your looking for is called: FireWire 800 port - there are some models who have the 400 port, I honestly never tried to use this with a 400 port version so I can't tell you the difference between the two.If you still have box/packaging that your MacBook/Mac Mini/Whatever Mac Device you have, check to see if you have FireWire 800 port listed under technical specifications. More than Likely this cable will work for you. If you don't have the box or the manual then you check it online by following this steps (if you have Lion Installed or Mac OS X v10.7 and above) :1. Click on the Apple Icon in the top left corner of the screen.2. Click "About this Mac"3. Click "More Info"4. Click "Overview" located on the Left side.5. Click on "System Report" button located on the bottom. When Click a different window should open.4. Click on "Audio (Built In)". Located on the Left side.5. "HDMI/DisplayPort Output" should be listed below the list under ""Audio (Built In)" on the right side of the window. If you see this then this cable will work for you.I know for a fact that that this cable will work with mid 2010 and present MacBook models.Buy this cable, You'll be forever grateful, I see cables similar to this costing $30 or more. This will be the best (small) investment that you'll make.-----Bellow is my Original Post when I had Snow Leopard installed:I received the cable in the mail today and I hooked up my MacBook to my HDTV and it worked!!! I have a Samsung HDTV and I knew that I was able to hook up my MacBook Pro to it. So instead of buying multiple cables and adapters, this one cable worked great, Great picture quality as well as sound quality.THIS WILL NOT WORK WITH ALL MACBOOKS!!!! IF you have a older model, then you have to do it the old fashion way and buy multiple cables and adapters in order to hook it up to your HDTV.To make sure your able to use this for your MacBook Do these simple Steps1. Click on the Apple Icon in the top left corner of the screen.2. Click About this Mac3. Click More Info4. Click on Audio (Built In). Located on the Left side.Once the Audio(Built In) is open check to see if you have HDMI Output or HDMI/DisplayPort Output on the list. If you do Then go right ahead and buy this Item. I think majority new laptops and Desktops have this feature, you have to investigate to double check to know for sure.REVISED: Once I received a new cord from the company (fairly easy after I posted the below negative review with a 1 star rating), it worked perfectly as advertised. It converted well and transmitted the sound and video well to my TV. I listen to the sound on a soundbar (Polk Audio IHT6000) and it still sounds crisp. I left my initial review below with the comments as my experience progressed for your review.- The only reason I am not now giving them 5 stars is because I had to post a negative review before I received a replacement cord. An email was not enough. However, it all worked out in the end.OLD REVIEW: (Cord was then replaced with a new cord that worked as advertised).I bought this cord to connect my Mac Air to my Sony Bravia SmartTV. After some screwing around and playing with the settings on my computer, I finally got the TV to show the picture, however, it flickered constantly. The picture on the TV had many black lines and flickered. It was that way from the beginning. I tried unplugging and reconnecting the cord several times, even tried resetting the TV, and the computer, but it never worked right.I figured I got one of those rare defective products, but, of course, the only response I got was try un-connecting and reconnecting it. Of course, that is basic, so I had already tried that. I got no other response from customer service.In the end, this was $7 wasted. I should've just spent $20 for a better rated cable. However, fi you get lucky and end up with a cord that isn't defective, then consider yourself lucky. My thought is these sellers are the only reason you have to sometimes be careful with Amazon, a website that I otherwise adore in every way (I've bought over 100 items on this site in the last 2 years).I read many poor reviews that suggested that the item was prone to fail after an undetermined number of hours of use. Others also said that the video quality was poor and that no sound came out of their tv speakers. I can say that the cable is realitively crappy quality, mainly at the hook-ups. They feel cheap and hollow (zero insulation). The picture quality it tiny bit grainy, but fine for my pc games. I think this is because it IS NOT a hmdi cable. It is a dvi mini to hdmi. The result is a non-hd information transfer. The frame rate is a little lower than my iMac, but not enough to bug me. Besides, all movies made in the US run at 24fps so it will only effect games visually. As for sound tansfer, i run a my mac dual botted with Win7 and i nticed a strange... stangeness. Windows will put sound through my tv speaked. Mac OSX will not. I think this a driver error and not a hardware or cable error.As for my overall review, it is a perfectly fine cable and a bargain at 11 bucks. I mean, to all those complainers, it is ELEVEN DOLLARS. I gave the product a 4 star rating due to the quality factor. And unless the cable fails randomly, it will stay that way. I think the majority of the failures are due to repetitive plugging and unplugging. Like i said, the hook-ups are poorly constructed. If you want this for a desktop display, i would recommend it. If this is for a laptop, i would steer clear and look for something a bit heavier duty. I will update my review if it begins to fail.The product does what its advertised to do but I have issues with the quality of the product. It is ok to use, if you are not planning to move it most of time. You plug it in at one place and just keep attaching and detaching mac on the other end.I have bought this and only able to use 4-5 times, because its HDMI port got detached and splited in two.I always plug it in when I wanted to use my mac with HD TV. The issue is there is no solid assembly on the HDMI port, the convertor chip is directly attached to low quality plastic. So it didn't able to hold the soldering to the chip and came out with the HDMI port. Convertor chip remain inside and port got detached, so no way to even repair.While taking out the HDMI port from TV, only the plastic cover with the convertor chip came out and HDMI port got stuck in the TV. That was the end of this cable.If you compare the cost of this cable, my per usage cost comes around 300/- per usage, which is very expensive considering you can actually buy other adaptors in this rate.There are many other cheap options available which can do the work, I have bought an adaptor and blue rigger HDMI cable in half the cost of this cable. Its more solid combination and does the similar work.A little flimsy, but works perfectly to connect 2010 Macbook pro to our HDTV. Sound and video quality are great.Nice works goodperfect for the priceWorks great