display standards - definitie. Wat is display standards
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Wat (wie) is display standards - definitie

ON-SCREEN DISPLAY SYSTEM
Display postscript; Display Postscript; Display ps

display standards      
Displaying         
  • Sexual display by a ''[[Megaselia]]'' female.
  • Male mountain gorilla
SET OF RITUALIZED BEHAVIOURS THAT ENABLE AN ANIMAL TO COMMUNICATE TO OTHER ANIMALS ABOUT SPECIFIC STIMULI
Tournament species; Display behavior; Display Behaviour; Display behaviour; Social display; Displaying; Display structure; Display behaviors; Intraspecific display; Visual display; Display structures
·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Display.
display standard         
  • Front and rear views of the TVM MD-3 CRT monitor (EGA / pre VGA era). Note the DE-9 connector, cryptic mode switch, contrast and brightness controls at front, and the V-Size and V-Hold knobs at rear, which allow the control of the scaling and signal to CRT refresh-rate synchronization respectively.
  • Comparison of video resolutions. The curved lines show the thresholds for resolutions with at least 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 million pixels.
SPECIFICATION OF DISPLAY ATTRIBUTES
Display mode; Display modes; CGA programming; Display standard; 1024x768; 1280x1024; WHUXGA; HUXGA; WHSXGA; HSXGA; HXGA; WHXGA; Extended Graphics Adaptor; EXtended Graphics Array; Hexadecatuple XGA; Hexadecatuple Super XGA; Hexadecatuple Ultra XGA; 1366x768; 1600x1200; 1366 x 768; Computer display standards; IBM XGA; 1920x1200; 1920X1200; 1280x800; PC display modes; PC display modes (details); 320x240; 320 x 240; 2560x1600; 2160i; 1600x1024; 1280x768; 160x120; 120x160; 240x320; 240x160; 160x240; Extended graphics array; 480x320; 900p; Full Wide VGA; 2560x1440; Graphics mode; QuadHD; 1600x900; 1280×800
<hardware> IBM and others have introduced a bewildering plethora of graphics and text display standards for {IBM PCs}. The standards are mostly implemented by plugging in a video display board (or "graphics adaptor") and connecting the appropriate monitor to it. Each new standard subsumes its predecessors. For example, an EGA board can also do CGA and MDA. With the PS/2, IBM introduced the VGA standard and built it into the main system board motherboard. VGA is also available as a plug-in board for PCs from third-party vendors. Also with the PS/2, IBM introduced the 8514 high-resolution graphics standard. An 8514 adaptor board plugs into the PS/2, providing a dual-monitor capability. Graphics software has to support the major IBM graphics standards and many non-IBM, proprietary standards for high-resolution displays. Either software vendors provide display drivers, or display vendors provide drivers for the software package. In either case, switching software or switching display systems is fraught with compatibility problems. Display Resolution Colours Sponsor Systems MDA 720x350 T 2 IBM PC CGA 320x200 4 IBM PC EGA 640x350 16 IBM PC PGA 640x480 256 IBM PC Hercules 729x348 2 non-IBM PC MCGA 720x400 T 320x200 G 256 PS/2 VGA 720x400 T 640x480 G 16 SVGA 800x600 16 VESA XVGA 1024x768 256 (IBM name: 8514) T: text, G: graphics. More colours are available from third-party vendors for some display types. See also MDA, CGA, EGA, PGA, Hercules, MCGA, VGA, SVGA, 8514, VESA.

Wikipedia

Display PostScript

Display PostScript (or DPS) is a 2D graphics engine system for computers which uses the PostScript (PS) imaging model and language (originally developed for computer printing) to generate on-screen graphics. To the basic PS system, DPS adds a number of features intended to ease working with bitmapped displays and improve performance of some common tasks.

Early versions of PostScript display systems were developed at Adobe Systems. During development of the NeXT computers, NeXT and Adobe collaborated to produce the official DPS system, which was released in 1987. NeXT used DPS throughout its history, while versions from Adobe were popular on Unix workstations for a time during the 1980s and 1990s.