Low Voltage Differential - meaning and definition. What is Low Voltage Differential
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What (who) is Low Voltage Differential - definition

TECHNICAL STANDARD
LVDS; Low Voltage Differential Signaling; Low Voltage Differential; Low-voltage differential signalling; MLVDS; Low voltage differential signaling; EIA-644; TIA-644; TIA/EIA-644
  • FPD Link I serializer
  • Doestek 34LM85AM, used in a tablet as flat panel display  transmitter

Low Voltage Differential         
<hardware> (LVD) A method of driving SCSI cables that will be formalised in the SCSI-3 specifications. LVD uses less power than the current differential drive (HVD), is less expensive and will allow the higher speeds of Ultra-2 SCSI. LVD requires 3.3 Volts DC instead of 5 Volts DC for HVD. (1999-02-16)
Low-voltage differential signaling         
Low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS), also known as TIA/EIA-644, is a technical standard that specifies electrical characteristics of a differential, serial signaling standard. LVDS operates at low power and can run at very high speeds using inexpensive twisted-pair copper cables.
LVDS         
Low Voltage Differential Signal (Reference: TI, NSC)

Wikipedia

Low-voltage differential signaling

Low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS), also known as TIA/EIA-644, is a technical standard that specifies electrical characteristics of a differential, serial signaling standard. LVDS operates at low power and can run at very high speeds using inexpensive twisted-pair copper cables. LVDS is a physical layer specification only; many data communication standards and applications use it and add a data link layer as defined in the OSI model on top of it.

LVDS was introduced in 1994, and has become popular in products such as LCD-TVs, in-car entertainment systems, industrial cameras and machine vision, notebook and tablet computers, and communications systems. The typical applications are high-speed video, graphics, video camera data transfers, and general purpose computer buses.

Early on, the notebook computer and LCD display vendors commonly used the term LVDS instead of FPD-Link when referring to their protocol, and the term LVDS has mistakenly become synonymous with Flat Panel Display Link in the video-display engineering vocabulary.