Sf cable began its business in 2002 with the goal of providing the highest quality cables, components, and accessories (including custom products like fiber optic and copper networking cables and modular adapters) at the lowest prices on the internet delivered with complete customer satisfaction.
SF Cable’s service is unmatched in the industry because we feature a huge inventory of over 8,000 SKUs of cables, components, and accessories ready to be shipped to our customers same day (in most cases) with no minimum orders or restocking fees. Even our custom orders are typically shipped in two to three days. All our products are premium quality at the lowest prices (up to 90% off retail) due to our low overhead and direct imports with no middle men to increase costs to our customers.
But what makes SF Cable completely different is our lifetime technical support. That’s right, call anytime during business hours and get the help you need whether you made your purchase last week, last month, or last year! We also offer a 60 day money back guarantee with a lifetime warranty on computer cables, adapters, and non-electronic products plus live support. Our products are RoHS compliant, environmentally friendly and we work in conjunction with ISO 9001-2000 registered manufacturers to ensure the highest quality merchandise at wholesale costs.
At SF Cable, we offer customer satisfaction and peace of mind with the most advanced form of SSL software available the 128-bit Extended Validation SSL Certificates by Symantec (Verisign Authentication Services) keeping your privacy, personal information and transactions protected.
Remember, our mission at SF Cable, Inc. is to provide you, our customers, with premium quality products at the lowest prices, delivered quickly and with exceptional customer service and support every time!
See Our Products: Power Cord
Ethernet Cables
HDMI Cables and Adapters
Power Strips
and many more..
The HDMI cable solved a lot of problems. It removed the need for a number of cables, making cable management a cakewalk. There are now versions of this cable, each iteration better than the last. This is where the confusion comes in.
Last week, at CES, you saw a lot of display manufacturers talk about innovations in display technology and how this year’s modular TVs are going to be everywhere. But it is not yet as simple as bringing home a TV and playing high-resolution content on it.
Even if you have the right cable for it, not all content is ready for the kind of promises that these TVs are making.
What are the things that you are most likely to hear this year about TVs? And how you should take it with a grain of salt.
QLED panels trump OLED panels. Quantum displays are here. And more companies will start making those. 4K resolution is tame now so the move towards 8K and 10K has increased. Along with that, so has the emphasis on higher refresh rates. Everyone wants to enjoy the kind of refresh rates while watching a movie as they do on their gaming monitors. So, 8K TVs with 120Hz refresh rates are something that you might end up seeing.
One of the features that TV manufacturers boast about, High Dynamic Range. This is what gives you bright highlights and punchier colors. The latest standard of it is HDR 10+. The idea of dynamic HDR is to give an accurate output per frame rather than decide an output range for the whole show. This is, of course, better because shows and movies have varying scenes in terms of brightness and color.
The push for wireless has increased now more than ever. But you will still need to connect a few things to your TV. There are a fair few ports that you will still need. HDMI 2.1, HDMI 2.0, USB, DisplayPort, and even RCA ports. With these ports, you will also need to make sure you have the right cables. While the HDMI version is always downward compatible, you cannot simply use older cables to get the best results. You need an HDMI 2.1 cable, as well as HDMI 2.0 cable with these ports.
TVs will boast of Dolby Atmos. In 2020, that is not quite as fanciful as it used to be. Televisions have a tendency of sounding okay, and speaker sets have always given a better experience until now. So, it remains to see if this year’s TVs are going to attempt to one-up the speaker industry or not. But the odds are in favor of the speaker.
With every piece of technology, there are caveats. There are TVs that are as thin as a debit card, TVs that roll out of sight, and modular TVs that you can arrange all over a wall. The question is if you actually need that. Are you ever going to use that feature once the novelty wears off? And more importantly, how long will that TV last when its structure is flexible?
All consumer goods come down to price, but with technology that is this premium, it comes down to worth more than just the price. Is the price justifiable? Is the technology still developing but the marketing of living in the future done too well?
If you are in the market for a television, this year is good a year as any to get one. Even more so because the HDMI 2.1 cable that came out last year succeeding the HDMI 2.0 cable, will actually be in use now. The port will be in TVs beyond just the flagship ones, and it might just be relatively cheaper.
Display tech will change, the HDMI cable will live on, at least for the near future. SFCable has your cable needs covered no matter the variant of all cables under the sun. But it is important to know which one works the best with your equipment and we will help you figure that out.