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Inside external display devices there is a controller board that will convert the video signal using color mapping and image scaling usually employing the discrete cosine transform (DCT) in order to convert any video source like CVBS, VGA, DVI, HDMI, etc. into digital RGB at the native resolution of the display panel. In a laptop the graphics ...
Video Graphics Array (VGA) [1] [75] [84] refers specifically to the display hardware first introduced with the IBM PS/2 line of computers in 1987. [85] Through its widespread adoption, VGA has also come to mean either an analog computer display standard, the 15-pin D-subminiature VGA connector, or the 640 × 480 resolution itself.
Effectively 1/16 the total resolution (1/4 in each dimension) of "Full HD", but with the height aligned to an 8-pixel "macroblock" boundary. Common in small-screen video applications, including portable DVD players and the Sony PSP. 480×272 (131k) 480 272 130,560 ~1% narrower than 16:9 (30:17 exact) Mac Mono 9" Original Apple Macintosh display
This chart shows the most common display resolutions, with the color of each resolution type indicating the display ratio (e.g., red indicates a 4:3 ratio). This article lists computer monitor, television, digital film, and other graphics display resolutions that are in common use. Most of them use certain preferred numbers.
A MicroLED display uses one LED per pixel as its backlight, so a MicroLED display is capable of displaying black by simply turning the relevant LED off — rendering the corresponding pixel completely dark. However, as of February 2025, MicroLED displays have not been widely adopted and are considerably more expensive than other AMLCD displays.
Macbook Pro (2011): 2 Displays: Can daisy chain two Apple Thunderbolt Displays together to get two displays, but the laptop's LCD may turn off. [11] [12] Macbook Pro (2012): 2+2 Displays: Can daisy chain two Apple Thunderbolt Displays, in addition to one HDMI display and the MacBook Pro's own display, for four displays total [13] [14]
x (width) y (height) Pixels (Mpx) Aspect ratio Proportion difference of total pixels Typical sizes (inch) Non-wide version Note Name WXGA WXGA+ WSXGA+
WXGA may refer to: Wide Extended Graphics Array, a computer graphics display resolution; WXGA-TV, a television station in the U.S. state of Georgia