Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[8]: §2.2.1.4 In DisplayPort versions 1.0–1.4a, the data is encoded using ANSI 8b/10b encoding prior to transmission. With this scheme, only 8 out of every 10 transmitted bits represent data; the extra bits are used for DC balancing (ensuring a roughly equal number of 1s and 0s).
This includes, for example: limitation to daisy-chain topology (a hub must expose at most one USB4 DFP), downgrade of DP capabilities to DP 1.2, disabling/replacing the USB3 tunnel with an integrated PCIe-USB3 Host controller attached via PCIe tunnel, switching back to the previous, slightly higher signaling rate of TB3 and its separate way of ...
Supports DVI, HDMI, DP, GVIF, UDI: 1.4: 8 July 2009: 2.0 IIA: 23 Oct 2008: Interface Independent Adaptation, any IP-based interface; Compressed or uncompressed video (only specified for compressed over PES though) 2.1 IIA: 18 July 2011: New mechanism to manage Type 1 content. Type 1 is a flag preventing content from going to v1.x HDCP.
DP 1.2 support is mandatory, while DP 1.4 is optional. Other overheads are possible on PCIe data (1.5% of 128b/130b is also removed) and Thunderbolt 3 protocol (you either optimise for speed or for latency), the last one gives only 21.6 Gbit/s to 25 Gbit/s. [ 80 ]
Display Stream Compression (DSC) is a VESA-developed video compression algorithm designed to enable increased display resolutions and frame rates over existing physical interfaces, and make devices smaller and lighter, with longer battery life. [1]
Mini DisplayPort connector. The Mini DisplayPort (MiniDP or mDP) is a miniaturized version of the DisplayPort audio-visual digital interface.. It was announced by Apple in October 2008, and by early 2013 all new Apple Macintosh computers had Mini DisplayPort, [2] as did the LED Cinema Display.
HDMI 1.3a is available to download free of charge, after registration. ... signals allowing the conversion to DVI and HDMI 1.2/1.4/2.0 signals ... DP-HDMI adapters do ...
USB-C plug USB-C (SuperSpeed USB 5Gbps) receptacle on an MSI laptop. USB-C, or USB Type-C, is a 24-pin connector (not a protocol) that supersedes previous USB connectors and can carry audio, video, and other data, to connect to monitors or external drives.