I know I can find them cheap on the internet, wondering if i can buy some locally today. Anyone know?
Probably your best bet. Used to be one by 281 and Bitters, I bet there are a few around town.
Office Max, Office Depot, and the other retailers like Wally World will have them, but will probably be price jacked unless you find them on special.
I don't think San Antonio has caught on to the Frys Electronics thing yet.
Damn Slomo you're one of the last person i thought would respond. THANKS! Must of used the place when you were down here.
I know a vato that sells that out of his trunk. He can get you HDMI cables, jumper cables, steel cables, knitting cables, gift cards from Cabelas, power cables, Cable comics... you name it he has it.
It's the kind of shop us nerds like to spend time in.
And of course I had to re-wire LJ's AV setup for the GTGs![]()
PC OUTLET.
like 15 bucks for the short one, 19 for the long one.
fry's
I got a meat cable you can suck on for really cheap.
some cable companys sell them to you cheap but i have to return them if you ever leave the company
Go to a Time Warner place and ask for one.
Everyone needs a friend that works for Best Buy.
Goodwill. I just bought a couple a week or two ago for a relative. I think I paid around fifteen bucks for both, retail price for the exact same thing at Walmart was a lot more, somewhere around four times what I paid.
Blockbuster sells them cheap.. just look where the video games are.
As funny as it sounds, I actually saw some at Ross the other day. Under $10.
Yep...Big Lots usually has them at a decent price. If you lived in Dallas, I would recommend Electronic Fry's...
Got mine on sale at THE SHACK!!!! They are monster cables also. Never skimp on HDMI cable quality, the better the cable the better the signal.
Wrong. There is no performance difference between a $5 cable from monoprice.com and a Monster Cable that costs $30. It's been thoroughly tested.
CNET strongly recommends cheap HDMI cables widely available from online retailers instead of the expensive counterparts sold in your local electronics store.
Here's why:
Expensive cables aren't worth it
If you walk into your typical electronics store to buy an HDMI cable, you're likely to see prices upward of $50 with promises of better performance and faster speeds. Do you really need to spend that much money on a single HDMI cable?
Absolutely not--those cables are a rip-off. You should never pay more than $10 for a standard six-foot HDMI cable. And despite what salesmen and manufacturers might tell you, there's no meaningful difference between the $10 cable and the $50 cable. Unless you see something obvious, such as dropouts or a flashing screen, the digital information transmitted by both cables is exactly the same--no cable can make the picture any better or any worse. We've used cables from many different companies in the past--such as Belkin, Accell, Monoprice, Monster, and SimplayHD--and have not run into any consistent issues with any brand of cable. With working cables and solid connections, we've seen no dropouts and "sparklies"--just consistent, dependable, high-quality audio and video. It's that simple.
You are correct......... my bad. Well, I didnt pay much for my HDMI cable anyhow. They were on closeout.![]()
Correct.
As a rule of thumb for digital signals, the difference becomes noticeable when the signal deteriorates so much that the device at the other end can not differentiate between a high and a low state (1 or 0). With all the build in redundancy and tolerances that happens for audio at roughly above a 60% signal loss!!!
So for a 5ft. cable you wouldn't notice a difference in quality if you would somehow connect the proper pins using twist wire ties vs. the most expensive gold plated 100$ cable since the signal loss would still be within the allowed tolerance.
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