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May 09, 2005 05:01 AM US Pacific
Timezone

VESA Announces Plan to Develop New
Digital Display Interface Standard; Open Standard to Unify
Internal and External Interfaces for All Display Applications
MILPITAS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 9, 2005--The Video
Electronics Standards Association (VESA) today announced the
development of a new digital display interface specification for
broad application within most forms of displays, including LCD,
plasma, CRT and projection displays, as well as PCs and other
sources of image content.
Known as DisplayPort(TM), the interface specification will
accelerate the adoption of protected digital outputs on PCs to
broadly support viewing of high definition and other types of
protected content through an optional content protection
capability, while enabling higher levels of display performance.
A group of industry leading companies, ATI Technologies (Nasdaq:ATYT),
Dell Inc., Genesis Microchip (Nasdaq:GNSS), Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ),
Molex Incorporated (Nasdaq:MOLX), NVIDIA (Nasdaq:NVDA), Royal
Philips Electronics (NYSE:PHG), Samsung Electronics, and Tyco
Electronics (NYSE:TYC) are close to completing the development
of a detailed proposal. It is the goal of this group to submit a
comprehensive version of the DisplayPort interface proposal to
VESA in the third quarter of 2005. Pending ratification and
adoption by VESA, the group intends that the DisplayPort
interface standard be available to the industry as an open,
extensible standard. Administration by VESA, a recognized
industry standards organization, will ensure that the
specification is maintained and will provide a forum for future
standard revisions.
"The member companies of VESA have worked exceptionally well
together over many years to develop a significant and important
set of standards for the industry, and we will approach this new
proposal with the same high level of energy and expertise," said
Ian Miller, chairman, VESA.
The standard will be designed to enable a common interface
approach across both internal and external display connections.
Internal connections include display interfaces within a
notebook PC or within an LCD display. External display
connections include the interface between a source device such
as a desktop PC, set-top box, DVD player or game console, and a
display device such as a direct view flat panel or projection
display for viewing video and graphics. The DisplayPort standard
will also include an optional digital audio capability allowing
streaming of high definition digital audio-video content over
the interface, and provides performance scalability to enable
the next generation of displays featuring higher color depths,
refresh rates, and display resolutions.
The DisplayPort standard will feature a small, user-friendly
connector that is optimized for use on thin profile notebooks in
addition to allowing multiple connectors on a graphics card.
General Overview
The DisplayPort standard will provide a high-quality digital
interface for video and audio content with optional secure
content protection, in a highly extensible format. This will
enable a wide range of source and display devices to be simply
and securely connected.
The PC industry needs a ubiquitous digital interface with
optional content protection that may be deployed widely at
minimum cost to enable broad access to premium content. The
DisplayPort standard addresses this need by providing an
optional secure method to protect both image and audio content.
The DisplayPort standard is designed to be usable in all
digital source display connections, whether these connections
are embedded within a device, such as a notebook PC, or via an
external cable between a source device and a display device.
As higher performance display and source technologies are
introduced, the demands on interface bandwidth expand
significantly. This problem will become even more acute in the
future with demands for more colors, higher resolutions, and
higher refresh rates. The DisplayPort standard will have a high
initial bandwidth and is designed to scale to even higher
bandwidths to accommodate future display requirements.
Delivering audio to a multi-media monitor has generally been
provided by a dedicated cable, increasing cost and desktop
clutter. With the introduction of the DisplayPort standard,
high-quality audio will be available to the display device over
the same cable as the video signal.
The display connectors used today by the computer industry
are relatively large, leading to a conflict with the trend
towards small, slim form factors. The DisplayPort standard
recognizes this problem and will introduce a small connector
that is simple to use. This makes display connections to all
source and display devices easier to implement, reducing
constraints on the industrial design for a wide range of
products. Small portable devices such as notebook PCs will find
this to be a significant benefit.
About VESA
The Video Electronics Standards Association is a worldwide
organization with more than 120 member companies that promotes
and develops timely, relevant, open display and display
interface standards, ensuring interoperability, and encouraging
innovation and market growth. For more information, visit
www.vesa.org.
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