Belkin Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter. 4k Compatible (Black) by Belkin. $13.99 $ 13 99. The Mini DisplayPort to HDMI Adapter lets you stream high-quality A/V. MacBook Air, Mac Mini, Microsoft Surface Pro 3/4. $7.85 $ 7 85 Prime. FREE Shipping on eligible orders. 4.4 out of 5 stars 10. AmazonBasics High-Speed Micro HDMI Cable. Connect your laptop to your HDTV using this Mini DisplayPort™ to HDMI adapter and included HDMI cable. From computer screen to big screen, the Belkin Mini DisplayPort™ to HDMI adapter with HDMI cable allows you to stream all of your favorite audio and video content quickly and easily.
The Good Bridges the gap between 27-inch iMac and HDMI video components; simplifies set up by scaling video to match the iMac's 720p input limit, regardless of source setting; USB-powered, which minimizes cable clutter. The Bad Won't input HDMI-equipped PC video to the iMac; no support for 2,550x1,440 native iMac resolution. The Bottom Line Belkin's AV360 iMac adapter edges out the competition by making it easier to connect HDMI-based video components to your iMac's Mini DisplayPort.
We'd prefer that Apple had gone with HDMI in the iMac to begin with, but until it makes that switch, this is the adapter we'd pick. Visit for details. We can't get too excited about an adapter, but Belkin's AV360, a device that bridges the gap between a and your HDMI-based video components, has stirred our enthusiasm by meaningfully differentiating itself from its competition. The key trick of the Belkin AV360 lies in its ease-of-use.
It requires less fiddling than the competing. It also plays better with HDMI switchers, a task that gave the Kanex model trouble. Throw in the fact that the Belkin AV360 and the Kanex XD each have a list price of $150 and our decision is easy. If you own a 27-inch iMac, and you want to pump in your cable box, your game console, or a Blu-ray player into the Mini DisplayPort input, the Belkin AV360 is the best device for the job. We concede that these adapters will only appeal to a limited audience.
Technically, they work with any display that has a Mini DisplayPort input, but their primary reason for being is to input home video components into the 27-inch iMac. It would have been far more convenient had Apple built an HDMI input into its largest iMac from the start. Perhaps the recent addition of HDMI to the offers hope for the next iMac update.
For now, annoyingly, you'll need a specialized Mini DisplayPort-to-HDMI adapter that can convert an input signal. A standard, inexpensive Mini DisplayPort-to-HDMI output adapter won't do the job. The Belkin AV360 is actually significantly larger than the Kanex XD. The Belkin model measures 0.875 inch high, 6.25 inches wide, and 3.375 inches deep. That's nearly three times the width of the Kanex XD. We suspect the Belkin's extra size has to do with extra internal components that provide important differences between the two adapters. The first difference is that unlike the Kanex XD and its wall-wart power adapter, the Belkin AV360 is USB-powered.
That's a minor distinction, as wall outlets are as easy to replicate as USB ports, but in the interest of minimizing cable clutter, we prefer the AV360. It keeps your desk tidier by routing the adapter's cables in only two directions, as opposed to three with the Kanex XD. The bigger advantage for the Belkin AV360 is that it simplifies the configuration steps due to its built-in resolution scaling. The resolution scaling is important due to the limits of the iMac, which Apple only configured to handle certain resolutions through its Mini DisplayPort input. It will accept video sources in its native 2,560x1,440 pixel resolution, but it's not equipped to handle 1,920x1,080, aka 1080p. Instead, the next highest resolution is 1,280x720, or 720p.
With the Kanex XD, that resolution limitation means you need to preset your video source to 720p, which potentially requires you to connect the device to another display first to lower the output resolution. Thanks to its scaler, the Belkin AV360 requires no such intermediate step. You can simply connect an external HDMI video source and the AV360 will automatically adjust the output to iMac-friendly 720p.