The reports of the death of the VGA connector are greatly exaggerated. Rumors of the demise of the VGA connector has been going around for a decade now, but VGA has been remarkably resiliant in the ...
Simple question, yet oddly hard to google: Do they add any latency? Would performance be better than a DVI-D to VGA adapter? I know they have to have a DAC because DP doesn't natively output analogue.
Old-school Macintosh-to-VGA adapter. Just solve for X, set the right DIP switches and you’re golden. If you’re the happy owner of a vintage Apple system like a 1989 Macintosh IIci you may know the ...
Cliff Electronics has announced the addition of the the popular 15 pin VGA “D-Sub” to FeedThrough range of connectors. All Cliff FeedThrough connectors can be assembled into an industry standard XLR ...
If your notebook has a VGA display, you must use a VGA connector to output the video signal. If you have another device that connects through an RGB component cable and want to connect it to the VGA ...
A point-to-point channel used to transfer video signals between two video controllers, typically between the graphics card and a video capture or TV board. Using an 8-bit data path, it provides 40 ...
After more than 25 years the venerable VGA port is finally disappearing from computers, but the interface is proving tough to phase out completely and will linger for years in projectors, monitors and ...
Running dual monitors can add some serious efficiencies to your working process. You can customize the configurations and bounce between both screens. Use them separately or connect them to drag ...
Do you also hate it when you drop 800 bucks on a graphics card, and spaghetti of wires to the power connectors remain visible with that vertical mount,. Well here is an idea, a small converter PCB ...
There are monitors which only have three BNC inputs and which use composite synchronisation (‘sync on green’). This circuit has been designed with these types of monitor in mind. As can be seen, the ...
I'm sure there is a spec somewhere (VESA or something) but here are a couple of references. Power is watts = volts * amps. Even though there was a +5V pin on a VGA connector, it may not be suitable ...