Menu

Wy Amimon Whdi Driver Download

17.01.2019

If you are thinking of setting up a home theater and don't want to worry about where to put your media playback equipment relative to the TV, a WHDI device could be the answer. Wireless Digital Home Interface is a technology designed to wirelessly connect video playback devices to displays. Members of the WHDI consortium, which includes Hitachi, Motorola, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, LG and founding member Amimon, are promoting it as 'the only viable option available for connecting the content on all HD devices to the TV.' Strictly speaking this isn't true because HD-capable computers without HDMI sockets can be connected to an HDTV using a USB device like. WHDI technology is superior, however, to the extent that it delivers lag free, picture-perfect video in true plug-and-play fashion (i.e., without the need to install software drivers). Recently I was given an opportunity to test Amimon's WHDI Stick, a two-part device that is similar in principle to the StreamHD but that connects via HDMI rather than USB. Amimon makes the WHDI Stick but doesn't sell it directly.

Currently it is available under the Galaxy brand in China. Companies in Europe and the U.S. Portfolio pedagoga psihologa dou obrazec 2. Will be able to put their logos on it later this year.

AMIMON is ramping up production to deliver WHDI chipsets to multiple OEMs and CE manufacturers. Numerous companies are developing products (wireless HDTVs, PC-to-TV, tablet-to-TV, HD Wireless Bridges, etc.) based on AMIMON’s WHDI chipsets. Oct 06, 2016  WY Amimon Whdi Driver Download. 10/6/2016 0 Comments We test Amimon's WHDI Stick, which is designed to wirelessly transmit video from any HDMI-equipped device to an HDTV. StarTech.com Wireless HDMI Extender WHDI - 1080p Wireless High Definition 100 ft / 30m - WHDMI Wireless HD Extender.

Whdi

The review sample I was sent is sold by Crystal Video Technology Company from Shenzhen, China. Like the StreamHD, the WHDI Stick consists of a transmitter and a receiver. The former (above) looks like a fat USB wireless Internet adapter, while the latter (below) is about the size of a moderately thick paperback book. The receiver I tested was decorated with a pleasant swirling graphic and came with a cradle that allowed it to stand upright or lay flat. In addition to these two components, the Crystal Video package contained a small remote control, a power adapter, a USB cable, a regular HDMI cable and an HDMI extender. The last of these is provided for situations where you can't plug the transmitter straight into a device because another cable gets in the way of the Stick's power chord.

The power for the transmitter and receiver can be delivered via mini USB sockets hooked up to a suitably equipped A/V component. The receiver also has a mains input that the included power adapter plugs into. In principle all you have to do to set up the WHDI Stick is plug the transmitter into the HDMI output on a video playback device such as a Blu-ray disc player or games console, connect the receiver to one of HDMI inputs on an HDTV, attach power supplies to each component and wait for them to connect.

Each device has two small lights, red on the transmitter and green on the receiver. One light indicates when a wireless connection has been made between the transmitter and receiver and the other shows when video is being sent or received. Getting the components to connect consistently was the main problem I had with the sample I was sent. Sometimes the receiver would detect the transmitter within a few seconds. On other occasions I would get a message on the TV saying they were connecting but they didn't. There were also occasions when I would start up the device and for no apparent reason be told that the wireless was off.