Oh dear. American education again!
5V is on pin 18. At least when I went to school, no matter where you applied voltage to a conductor, the voltage was the same throughout, unless you drew a huge amount of current and the voltage dropped a little related to the resistance of the cable. However that is not an issue between pin 18 at either end of an HDMI cable. So it will not blow your computer. If the voltage on pin 18 of your computer is 5 volts, which it will be, then no power will flow back into your computer to do any damage. Go to bed early and rest that broken brain of yours.
I will never defend American education. Especially while the Texas Board of Education is seemingly in charge of almost every textbook that makes it into the curriculum across the US!
Regardless, I never learned electricity beyond my Sophomore Physics class. That was just me. (To be fair, there are many others...
) (Though also to be fair, I have recently learned how to build XO curcuits from a schematic and am able to successfully install lighting. So all is not lost. Next up will be some rudimentary plumbing that does not involve PVC and Glue.
)
Anyway, one of my friends went on to be a nuclear engineer on an Aircraft Carrier after graduating Annapolis... so there's that, too.
We had the same High School Physics teacher.
On the other hand, I could strip and rebuild my Saxophones where all the other kids were rebuilding carburetors. *shrugs
Now, as it regards HDMI cables... I'm pretty certain it all revolves around sorcery. Merlin is our only hope! Merlin or Gandalf. *shrugs
I'll take either, perhaps, though Gandalf might be way more cool.
That sword, and Shadowfax!
Really, though... Thank you, Mark!