If you’re like most people, your TV is probably your main source of entertainment. But if you want to watch your favorite shows or movies on the big screen, you need a way to connect your PC to the TV. There are a few different ways to do this. You can use a cable box or satellite box to connect your PC to the TV, or you can use an HDMI cable and a HDMI port on your TV. whichever method you choose, there are some things you need to know before getting started. Here are four tips for connecting your PC to your TV:

  1. Make sure your PC and TV have the same video output format. Most TVs have an HDMI port that can output video in both formats, but some PCs only have an HDMI port that outputs in one format (usually HDCP-compliant). If you don’t know which format your PC uses, check the documentation that came with it or look for a compatible HDMI cable online.
  2. Make sure your computer has enough power. Your computer needs enough power to run the required software and hardware needed for connecting to the TV. If you don’t have enough power available, try using a power adapter or using another method of connecting such as using a USB port on the back of the TV.
  3. Check for compatibility issues before starting. Before starting any connection process, make sure both devices are compatible by checking for known issues and downloading any required software/drivers/firmware from manufacturer websites or support pages for devices like TVs and gaming consoles etc..
  4. Use common sense when setting up connections between devices. Always use caution when connecting cables between devices as they can be easily damaged if not handled correctly ..

Connecting a PC to your TV is dead simple. All you’ll usually need is an HDMI cable, and then you can access every media service, streaming site, and PC game — on your TV.

Simple streaming boxes like the Roku, Chromecast, Fire TV, Apple TV, and others are still slick and convenient. But not every app is on every box — a PC gives you access to everything, plus web pages, plus PC games.

PCs Are a Living Room Swiss Army Knife

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PCs are a little bit more awkward to use because they don’t have the polished interface and dedicated remote of a Roku or similar TV-optimized box. But using a PC in your living room isn’t as awkward as it sounds, and you gain an extreme amount of flexibility:

A TV can even be thought of as a big computer monitor. It could be used as a secondary monitor for your PC’s desktop or make a good big screen for a presentation.

It’s Just an HDMI Cable Away

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If you’ve connected a streaming box, game console, or another type of device to your TV, you’ve done it by connecting an HDMI cable to the HDMI-out port on the device and the HDMI-in port on the TV. To connect a laptop or desktop to your TV, you just need to do the exact same thing — connect an HDMI cable to the HDMI-out port on your PC and the HDMI-in port on your TV.

Laptops make this extra easy, as you can just carry the laptop into your living room and set it down within cable length of your TV. With a desktop, you can hook everything up next to your TV.

With some laptops, it won’t be quite this simple. Many laptops don’t have a full-size HDMI port to save space, so you may need to adapter cable. This will vary from laptop to laptop — perform a web search for your laptop’s model number and “HDMI out” for more information. If your computer or TV is old and doesn’t support HDMI, it may support VGA or something similar.

Controlling Your PC

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Now you can view your computer’s screen on your TV. A wireless mouse and keyboard — either using Bluetooth or a USB receiver — are convenient here, allowing you to control the interface from across the room. If you want to play PC games on your TV, you can plug an Xbox controller or similar game controller into your PC and treat it like a game console.

There are specialized interfaces to make this better. For example, the Kodi (formerly XBMC) media center software provides a media center interface for your TV. Steam’s big-picture mode makes launching PC games easier. But these interfaces aren’t really necessary — just firing up your web browser, going to a streaming service’s website, and entering full-screen mode will give you the interface you need. For local files, VLC or another media player software is good, too.

If you have a Roku, Chromecast, Apple TV, Fire TV, or similar box, we don’t recommend throwing it out. Using a Roku to play back Netflix ,or casting YouTube content to a Chromecast is convenient. But, at some point, you’ll run up against the limitations of that streaming box and want to do something it doesn’t support. A general-purpose computer will let you do anything you want to do.

It’s just like computing in general — smartphones are great, portable devices, but sometimes you need a PC to get the job done.

Image Credit: William Hook on Flickr, Alan Levine on Flickr, Jorge Sanz on Flickr