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The original DisplayPort Dual-Mode standard (version 1.0), used in DisplayPort 1.1 devices, only supported TMDS clock speeds of up to 165 MHz (4.95 Gbit/s bandwidth). This is equivalent to HDMI 1.2, and is sufficient for up to 1920 × 1200 at 60 Hz.
DSC version 1.2 was released on 27 January 2016 and is included in version 1.4 of the DisplayPort standard; DSC version 1.2a was released on 18 January 2017. The update includes native encoding of 4:2:2 and 4:2:0 formats in six-pixel containers, 14/16 bits per color, and minor modifications to the encoding algorithm.
Deprecated by Intel in favor of DisplayPort. 3.5 mm TRRS connector (male) 3.5 mm (1 ⁄ 8 in) TRRS and TRS connector: Analog camcorders commonly use a 3.5 mm four-contact TRRS connector to carry composite video and stereo audio. Jack appears identical to more common three-contact stereo audio-only 3.5 mm TRS connector. DisplayPort
USB4 Version 1.0 only defines how to tunnel DP connections according to the DisplayPort 1.4a specification (up to HBR3 speeds). USB4 Version 2.0 updates this support to the full DisplayPort 2.1 specification (up to UHBR20 speeds). Notably, the USB4 specification explicitly carves out needing to support the UHBR13.5 DP speed, even if UHBR20 is ...
Tunneled DisplayPort 1.4a: ... USB 1.0 1 HDx: NRZI: 2 1.5 Mbit/s ... making the function of a Thunderbolt 3 port a superset of that of a USB 3.1 Gen 2 port ...
This is wrong as neither DisplayPort uses logic levels of 3.3 V (see above) nor does HDMI use 5 V logic levels. They both use differential signaling where the exact differential voltages aren’t specified, but are both way below 1 V. --Lukas.fink1 21:26, 1 March 2024 (UTC) Hi, thanks for the observations. Will review later today.
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