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Much like Intel dominating AMD CPUs until the release of the Ryzen line, DisplayPort's time at the top may be coming to an ...
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XDA Developers on MSNI vow to never use HDMI again - here’s why
It's pretty much impossible to find a display (or any consumer electronics made in the last decade, for that matter) that ...
A new Mac-friendly Thunderbolt 4 dock from Plugable delivers dual-4K HDMI, 96W charging, and 13 ports without a premium price tag.
So truly it comes down to two things: contrast vs. brightness. As long as the Z85 OLED is bright enough, it’s going to be the ...
The Anker HDMI Switch is cheaper than ever at just $9.99! It will simplify your setup by turning a single HDMI port into two.
The forthcoming HDMI 2.2 standard will bring more bandwidth, a new way to get a handle on lip-sync errors and a new, backward-compatible cable, the HDMI Forum said at CES 2025.
With HDMI 2.2, the clear-cut "Ultra96" designation instantly tells you that a cable supports the new specification. Ideally, there's no more guesswork -- just plug and play.
HDMI 1.3b1 defines testing for products based on the HDMI type C Mini connector. Abstract: HDMI 1.3b1 does not add features or performance to HDMI 1.3a. It simply adds parameters for testing products ...
The HDMI Forum announced at CES today that it's time to start considering new headaches. HDMI 2.2 will require new cables for full compatibility, but it has the same physical connectors.
Posted in FPGA, hardware Tagged cell phone, cell phone display, display, dsi, hdmi, mipi ← Inexpensive AVR Programmer Made From Five Components Hackaday Links: November 2, 2014 → ...
“With the introduction of HDMI 1.3 we doubled the bandwidth from about 4.9 Gigabits per second to over 10 Gbps, and these cables are called ‘High Speed HDMI’ cables.
I don’t like HDMI. Despite it being a pretty popular interface, I find crucial parts of it to be alien to what hackers stand for. The way I see it, it manages to be proprietary while bringing… ...
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