connector on the left is employed to replace the older connection options for audio and video signals, which require at least two, depending on the use case even up to five, individual cable connections with
RCA connectors (see middle section, colored). An exception was the technically outdated
SCART type A/V connector most right. Due to multiple audio (and video) output devices, there are many outputs on a DVD player, such as an RCA jack, component outputs, and an HDMI output. Consumers may become confused with how to connect a player to a TV or amplifier. Most systems include an optional digital audio connector for this task, which is then paired with a similar input on the amplifier. The physical connection is typically
RCA connectors or
TOSLINK, which transmits a
S/PDIF stream carrying either uncompressed digital audio (PCM) or the original compressed audio data (Dolby Digital, DTS, MPEG audio) to be decoded by the audio equipment.
Video Video is another issue which continues to present the most problems. Early generations of DVD players usually outputted
analog video only, via both
composite video on an RCA jack and
S-Video. However, neither connector was intended to be used for
progressive video, and most later players sold then gained another set of connectors,
component video, which keeps the three components of the video, luminance and two color differentials, on fully separate wires. This video information is taken directly from the DVD itself. The three components compare well to S-Video, which uses two wires, uniting and degrading the two color signals, and composite, which uses only wire one, uniting and degrading all three signals. The connectors are further confused by using a number of different physical connectors on different player models, RCA or
BNC, as well as using
VGA cables in a non-standard way (VGA is normally analog
RGB—a different, incompatible form of component video). Even worse, there are often two sets of component outputs, one carrying
interlaced video, and the other progressive, or an interlaced/progressive switch (either a physical switch or a menu setting). In Europe (but not most other PAL areas),
SCART connectors are generally used, which can carry composite and analog RGB interlaced video signals (RGB can be progressive, but not all DVD players and displays support this mode) or Y/C (
S-Video), as well as analog two-channel sound and automatic 4:3 or 16:9 (widescreen) switching on a single convenient multi-wire cable. The analog RGB component signal offers video quality which is superior to S-Video and identical to
YPbPr component video. However, analog RGB and S-Video signals can not be carried simultaneously, due to each using the same pins for different uses, and displays often must be manually configured as to the input signal, since no switching mode exists for S-Video. (A switching mode does exist to indicate whether composite or RGB is being used.) Some DVD players and set-top boxes offer YPbPr component video signals over the wires in the SCART connector intended for RGB, though this violates the official specification and manual configuration is again necessary. (Hypothetically, unlike RGB component, YPbPr component signals and S-Video Y/C signals could both be sent over the wire simultaneously, since they share the luminance (Y) component.)
HDMI is a digital connection for carrying high-definition video, similar to
DVI. Along with video, HDMI also supports up to eight-channel digital audio. DVD players with connectors for high-definition video can
upconvert the source to formats used for higher definition video (e.g.,
720p,
1080i,
1080p, etc.), before outputting the signal. By no means, however, will the resulting signal be high-definition video; that is, aside from optional
deinterlacing, upconverting generally consists of merely scaling the video's dimensions to match that of higher resolution formats, forgoing the scaling that would normally occur in the output device.
USB Some DVD players include a
USB video recorder. As well as such, there are also have DVD players with a
USB port to be able to play digital media types as well as MP4, MP3, etc.
Wireless Wireless connections (
bluetooth and/or
Wi-Fi) are useful to manage (play/record) wirelessly content from or to other devices (i.e. cell phones). == Prices ==