By Jose Vilches, TechSpot.com
Published: August 1, 2007
Little over a year ago, the Video Electronics Standards Association, also known as VESA, announced the approval of the DisplayPort standard, a new license-free state-of-the-art digital audio and video interface which is meant
to replace DVI in the PC world.
This is what
DVI is
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVITop companies such as Dell, HP, Lenovo and others have stated to support the standard. Taking a step forward in the industry's move to DisplayPort, AMD recently announced reports of successful interoperability testing of a next-generation graphics processor with a native DisplayPort 1.1 transmitter. AMD expects to ship the first ATI Radeon graphics sporting the new interface in the early 2008 timeframe.
"AMD has been driving the high-definition transition on the PC with innovative firsts such as integrated HDMI, high-bandwidth digital content protection (HDCP) and our Unified Video Decoder (UVD)," said AMD’s Imi Mosaheb. "We are once again breaking new ground in customer-centric innovation by offering increased choice in video and display technologies to our users."
DisplayPort aims to unify and standardize display across the desktop and notebook computing environments through a common high-bandwidth interconnect. Samsung Electronics has already announced that will begin production of the world's first LCD monitor to feature the DisplayPort interface in Q2 2008.
http://www.techspot.com/news/26397-amd-demos-first-gpus-to-feature-native-displayport-11.html