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A monitor is a monitor. That one may be a "composite" monitor suggests that antoher can be a "composite, component" monitor simpoly because it accepts as input, both composite video and component video. Under this premise, a monitor with a DVI interface is a DVI monitor. DIV is the acronym for Digital Video Interface. Given this, there are three types of DVI connectors: DVI-A, DVI-D, DVI-I. DIV-A carries an analog signal -- odd, considering the connector name excludes analog by virtue of using the term "digital". (DIV-D: digital, DIV-I:integrated, which contains both.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.40.33.228 ( talk) 21:47, 25 October 2007 (UTC)
On April 7, 2005, this article was nominated for deletion. The result was keep. See Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Composite monitor for a record of the discussion. — Korath ( Talk) 04:29, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
"Often, video studios will use stand-alone composite monitors since people there don't watch much TV" 81.7.224.241 12:41, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
"monochrome Chrominance and Luminance" ... er, are you SURE about that?
Luminance is what's used by monochrome displays, and was all that B/W broadcasts transmitted. Chrominance is what's added on top of that signal to encode colour information for colour screens... 87.114.192.128 ( talk) 23:55, 11 December 2014 (UTC)
This article was nominated for deletion on 21 May 2021. The result of the discussion was no consensus. |
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
A monitor is a monitor. That one may be a "composite" monitor suggests that antoher can be a "composite, component" monitor simpoly because it accepts as input, both composite video and component video. Under this premise, a monitor with a DVI interface is a DVI monitor. DIV is the acronym for Digital Video Interface. Given this, there are three types of DVI connectors: DVI-A, DVI-D, DVI-I. DIV-A carries an analog signal -- odd, considering the connector name excludes analog by virtue of using the term "digital". (DIV-D: digital, DIV-I:integrated, which contains both.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.40.33.228 ( talk) 21:47, 25 October 2007 (UTC)
On April 7, 2005, this article was nominated for deletion. The result was keep. See Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/Composite monitor for a record of the discussion. — Korath ( Talk) 04:29, Apr 13, 2005 (UTC)
"Often, video studios will use stand-alone composite monitors since people there don't watch much TV" 81.7.224.241 12:41, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
"monochrome Chrominance and Luminance" ... er, are you SURE about that?
Luminance is what's used by monochrome displays, and was all that B/W broadcasts transmitted. Chrominance is what's added on top of that signal to encode colour information for colour screens... 87.114.192.128 ( talk) 23:55, 11 December 2014 (UTC)