Originally posted by Ancurio
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VESA Unveils The Embedded DisplayPort 1.4a Specification
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Originally posted by Daktyl198 View PostSee, you and the other people in this thread are talking about higher-end laptops that you actively search out. ofc you're going to get higher res screens if you look for them.
The unfortunate truth is that a solid 70+% of consumer laptops still use a 1366x768 resolution... even the ones with really good hardware otherwise.
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Originally posted by varikonniemi View PostShow me a non high-end phone with higher than full hd resolution.
I think the most popular mid-range phone of this kind is the LG G3 D855, which can be had starting from $385 at Amazon. The others are mostly from Chinese white-box manufacturers.
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Originally posted by Daktyl198 View PostSee, you and the other people in this thread are talking about higher-end laptops that you actively search out. ofc you're going to get higher res screens if you look for them.
The unfortunate truth is that a solid 70+% of consumer laptops still use a 1366x768 resolution... even the ones with really good hardware otherwise.
But hey, maybe the new specifications will move something in the panel and laptop OEM industry.Stop TCPA, stupid software patents and corrupt politicians!
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Originally posted by steveriley View PostI have a three year old ThinkPad T520 containing a 1920 x 1080 panel. Soon I'll be replacing it with a T550 containing a 2880 x 1620 (3K) panel. Seems not backwards to me. Although I wish Lenovo would use 4K instead.
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Article with more information about the new embedded displayport 1.4a standard.
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/ves...amd,28524.html
Adaptive Sync is sadly only an optional feature.
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The vesa spec is only out for a few days, you must be talking about AMD's solution.
Adaptive Sync is not freesync.
Also adaptive sync would allow viewing 24 or 25 fps video's on a 30/50/60/100/120/(everything higher than 24 or 25) Hz.
This would remove the need for all kinds of motion interpolation algorithms to make video's look smooth. A brilliantly simple solution to the problem of matching the video frame-rate to the screen refresh rate.
Just allowing the screen to adapt it's screen refresh rate to the playing video's native frame-rate dynamically is a brilliantly simple solution. Adaptive sync is guaranteed to give an exact, correct solution that is true to the source material. (Motion estimation algorithms are fundamentally fallible due to making mistakes, assumptions that are not guaranteed to hold. Not to mention their complexity and subtle errors created.) This is a quantum leap / revolution / breakthrough in video playing!
With adaptive sync you could play 24 of 25 fps video's on a 60Hz monitor with an image guaranteed to be correct.
Meaning guaranteed no framerate conversion artefacts.
Image is correct in terms of having no framerate conversion uncertainties, bugs, problems, inaccuracies.
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/1...for-8k-scalingLast edited by plonoma; 14 February 2015, 09:14 AM.
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