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  2. Screen magnifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screen_magnifier

    Screen magnifiers commonly provide several other features for people with particular sight difficulties: Color inversion. Many people with visual impairments prefer to invert the colors, typically turning text from black-on-white to white-on-black. This can reduce screen glare and is useful for elderly people with age-related macular degeneration.

  3. Output device - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Output_device

    A display device is the most common form of output device which presents output visually on computer screen. The output appears temporarily on the screen and can easily be altered or erased. With all-in-one PCs, notebook computers, hand held PCs and other devices; the term display screen is used for the display device.

  4. Mobile High-Definition Link - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobile_High-Definition_Link

    With an active adapter, MHL devices are able to connect to HDMI display devices that do not have MHL capability by actively converting the signal to HDMI. These adapters often feature an additional Micro-USB port on them to provide charging power to the mobile device because standard HDMI ports do not supply sufficient current.

  5. HDMI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI

    The HDMI Alternate Mode for USB-C allows HDMI-enabled sources with a USB-C connector to directly connect to standard HDMI display devices, without requiring an adapter. [197] The standard was released in September 2016, and supports all HDMI 1.4b features such as video resolutions up to Ultra HD 30 Hz and CEC. [ 198 ]

  6. ZoomText - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZoomText

    The software is intended to help individuals with "early vision loss, computer vision syndrome, and visual impairments such as macular degeneration and glaucoma". [5] ZoomText has dual monitor support and is capable of magnifying the screen up to 60 times; it also allows the user to choose which part of the screen is magnified.

  7. Lightning (connector) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightning_(connector)

    Apple offers various adapters that allow the Lightning connector to be used with other interfaces, such as 30-pin, USB, HDMI, VGA, and SD cards. The Lightning to 30-pin adapter supports only a limited subset of the available 30-pin signals: USB data, USB charging, and analog audio output (via the DAC inside of the adapter [28]).

  8. Composite monitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composite_monitor

    A composite monitor must have a two-dimensional approximately flat display device with circuitry to accept a composite signal with picture and synchronisation information, process it into monochrome chrominance and luminance, or the red, green, and blue of RGB, plus synchronisation pulses, and display it on a screen, which was predominantly a ...

  9. Magnifier (Windows) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnifier_(Windows)

    Prior to Windows Vista, Magnifier could be used to magnify the screen up to 9 times its normal size. Windows Vista and later allow up to 16× magnification. In Windows Vista, Magnifier uses WPF, which in turn uses vector images to render the content. As a result, the rendered magnified image is sharp and not pixelated. [4]