industry news
Subscribe Now

VESA Refreshes DisplayID Standard to Support Higher Resolutions and Tiled Displays

NEWARK, CA (23 September 2013) ? The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA®) today announced the publication of VESA?s Display Identification Data Standard (DisplayID) version 1.3. Delivering on the Association?s promise to create standards that address emerging trends in display technology–including higher resolutions and pixels per inch (PPI)–the latest version of DisplayID now includes support for resolutions at 4K and beyond, tiled display topologies, stereo 3D formats and additional timing standards.

?Every day, increasing transmission rates, video resolutions, PPI and processing capabilities are making new display capabilities available to consumers. Our vision for DisplayID was to define a standard that can easily keep pace with a rapidly expanding universe of display options,? said Syed Athar Hussain, display domain architect for Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and VESA vice-chairman. ?With DisplayID, video sources?like computers, game consoles, cable boxes and video players?can easily discover the capabilities of the monitors they are connected to, enabling an automatic and seamless user experience between devices.? 

The DisplayID standard was developed by the VESA members to define data structures that a video display uses to describe its physical and performance attributes. Encoded into a display EEPROM, DisplayID enables a video source to discover these display attributes, and to customize its video data stream output for the unique capabilities of an individual display.

DisplayID was developed as the evolutionary advancement for VESA?s widely adopted Extended Display Identification Data (EDID) standard. Designed specifically to be ?future-proof,? DisplayID employs flexible header and data structures that can be of varying length and number, in contrast to the fixed header and data structures used by EDID. The flexible, modular data structures defined by DisplayID enable new definitions to identify new display resolutions, refresh rates, audio standards and other formats and capabilities. One of the more exciting new capabilities, tiled displays, supports a single display that uses multiple video processors, with each video processor handling the image on one segment of the display. The latest 4K @60Hz monitors now entering the market offer four times the resolution of conventional high-definition TV. These new 4k monitors frequently employ tiled displays to enable a more optimized system level solution that satisfies the higher resolution trend. 

?Display manufacturers are starting to develop advanced technologies, including 8K ultra-HD displays and displays that incorporate multiple video processors. These new display capabilities need to be identified and defined within the DisplayID standard for effective inter-operability and ease of use with other consumer and computer systems,? said Bill Lempesis, executive director at VESA. ?Keeping standards at the forefront of technology enables manufacturers to deliver the latest capabilities in display technology to the consumer. VESA is proud to be an association that propels advancements within the display interface industry.? 

For more information on VESA and the DisplayID standard, please visit http://www.vesa.org/. For more information about DisplayPort, please visit http://www.displayport.org or connect with us on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. 

About VESA

The Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) is an international, non-profit standards association representing a global network of more than 200 hardware, software, computer, display and component manufacturers committed to developing and promoting the electronics industry. VESA has an established 24-year track record of creating and supporting simple, universal and cross-product solutions for today?s video and electronics industry. The association?s standards include DisplayPort?, the industry replacement for DVI, LVDS and VGA. DisplayPort utilizes a state-of-the-art digital protocol and provides an expandable foundation to enable incredible digital display experiences. 

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
May 16, 2025
Whatever the age into which you were born, if you were a kid enjoying something, the odds were that it was corrupting your soul....

featured paper

How Google and Intel use Calibre DesignEnhancer to reduce IR drop and improve reliability

Sponsored by Siemens Digital Industries Software

Through real-world examples from Intel and Google, we highlight how Calibre’s DesignEnhancer maximizes layout modifications while ensuring DRC compliance.

Click here for more information

featured chalk talk

Machine Learning on the Edge
Sponsored by Mouser Electronics and Infineon
Edge machine learning is a great way to allow embedded devices to run applications that can collect sensor data and locally process that data. In this episode of Chalk Talk, Amelia Dalton and Clark Jarvis from Infineon explore how the IMAGIMOB Studio, ModusToolbox™ Software, and PSoC and AURIX™ microcontrollers can help you develop a custom machine learning on the edge application from scratch. They also investigate how the IMAGIMOB Studio can help you easily develop and deploy AI/ML models and the benefits that the PSoC™ 6 Artificial Intelligence Evaluation Kit will bring to your next machine learning on the edge application design process.
Aug 12, 2024
56,356 views