Simon Watkins
Works fine. I used it to scan my new Kenable HDMI 2.1 cable, and it checks out fine. It's strange how some QR codes are different on different cable packagings though. Because some can be scanned using your phones built in QR code scanner, yet others need this app.
Meandering NL
I would like to be able to save a fully comprehensive & immutable PDF report of the cable just scanned (ie: ALL stats, HDMI VERSION, LENGTH, BANDWITH, DYNAMIC HDR, eARC, DOLBY VISION, DOLBY ATMOS, 3D, HDCP 2.2 2.3, Ethernet, ALLM, QMS, QFT, DTS, CEC, VRR etc. The report should include the serial number scanned, a photo with QR blocked. You already have all the data and it would give the user a certificate of authenticity for filing
18 people found this review helpful
Marcus Mizerak
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Say you're at a flee market and see a 48 Gbps HDMI cable with label saying it's certified. You scan it, reminder you must have cell service for app to work, and says it's not listed or fraudulent. What's hard for people to understand? I've used it many times at BestBuy and Target and numbers matched with sticker and specs, though it's highly unlikely BestBuy would sell fake anything TBH. It's more reassurance that the item is indeed genuine.
43 people found this review helpful