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Soy Carmín on MSNA Fond Farewell: Why I Vow to Never Use HDMI Again
HDMI has been the undisputed king of video connections for years, but a new era has arrived. This article takes a friendly ...
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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 ...
Much like Intel dominating AMD CPUs until the release of the Ryzen line, DisplayPort's time at the top may be coming to an ...
Back at CES 2025, Hisense took the world by storm, announcing its first RGB-miniLED TV, in both 100" and 116". In fact, we ...
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… ...
HDMI 2.1 is also on both of the next-generation game consoles, the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X. In fact, to get the most out of those consoles you'll want a TV that supports at least some HDMI ...
A new Mac-friendly Thunderbolt 4 dock from Plugable delivers dual-4K HDMI, 96W charging, and 13 ports without a premium price tag.
HDMI 2.1 supports three very attractive features for those who own PS5 and Xbox Series X consoles. These are Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), Auto Low Latency Mode (ALLM), and 120Hz gaming at 4K.
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.
HDMI and DisplayPort are similar when it comes to practical applications, and the industry largely views them as complimentary standards. Indeed, HDMI 2.1a offers VESA’s Display Stream Compression.
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 → ...
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