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My video card has a HDMI input, the point is that i don't see the difference between HDMI quality and VGA, is there something wrong?

2007-11-04 10:37:08 · 3 answers · asked by andrew c 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Monitors

3 answers

VGA is for analog video signals while HDMI is for digital video and audio signals. You will only notice the difference when video source is high definition such as that from a Blu-ray disc player.

2007-11-04 10:46:46 · answer #1 · answered by Karz 7 · 0 0

-The term Video Graphics Array (VGA) refers either to an analog computer display standard, the 15-pin D-subminiature VGA connector, first marketed in 1987 by IBM, or the 640×480 resolution itself. While this resolution has been superseded in the computer market, it is becoming a popular resolution on mobile devices.

-The High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) is a licensable audio/video connector interface for transmitting uncompressed, encrypted digital streams. HDMI connects DRM-enforcing digital audio/video sources, such as a set-top box, a Blu-ray Disc player, a PC running Windows Vista, a video game console, or an AV receiver, to a compatible digital audio device and/or video monitor, such as a digital television (DTV). HDMI began to appear in 2006 on prosumer HDTV camcorders and high-end digital still cameras.

2007-11-04 11:02:10 · answer #2 · answered by Rico A 4 · 2 0

HDMI gets you the rather appropriate photograph, yet shop in ideas... rather appropriate photograph is in undemanding words as stable because of the fact the video card can push so as that's the area your susceptible link is going to be, no longer the cable itself.

2016-12-15 16:37:08 · answer #3 · answered by evert 4 · 0 0

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