📑 Table of Contents
OpenLDI (Open LVDS Display Interface)
Type Digital computer video connector
Production history
Designer Silicon Graphics
Designed 1998; 28 years ago (1998)
Superseded by Digital Video Interface (DVI)
General specifications
Hot pluggable Yes
External Yes
Video signal Digital video stream
Pins 36
Connector centronics-style

OpenLDI (Open LVDS Display Interface) is a high-bandwidth digital-video interface standard for connecting graphics/video processors to LCD monitors. Even though the promoter’s group originally designed it for the desktop computer to monitor application, the majority of applications today are industrial display connections. For example, displays in medical imaging, machine vision, and construction equipment use the OpenLDI chipsets.

The SGI 1600SW used the interface.

OpenLDI is based on the FPD-Link specification, which was the de facto standard for transferring graphics and video data through notebook computer hinges since the late 1990s. Both OpenLDI and FPD-Link use low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS) as the physical layer signaling, and the three terms have mistakenly been used synonymously. (FPD-Link and OpenLDI are largely compatible, beyond the physical-layer; specifying the same serial data-streams).

The OpenLDI standard was promoted by National Semiconductor, Texas Instruments, Silicon Graphics (SGI) and others. OpenLDI wasn't used in many of the intended applications after losing the computer-to-monitor interconnect application to a competing standard, Digital Visual Interface (DVI).[1]

The SGI 1600SW was the only monitor produced in significant quantities with an OpenLDI connection, though it had minor differences from the final published standards. The 1600SW used a 36-pin MDR36 male connector with a pinout that differs from that of the 36-pin centronics-style connector in the OpenLDI standard.

Sony produced some VAIO displays and laptops using the standard.

(According to the SGI 1600SW entry, a few other displays were made by various manufacturers using the OpenLDI standard.)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Dipert, Brian (January 4, 2007). "Connecting systems to displays: What we got here is failure to communicate". EDN. Vol. 2007, no. 1. Reed Electronics Group. p. 46-58. Internet Archive: EDN20070104. Retrieved 2020-08-12.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

SGI 1600SW

actively traded on eBay a decade later, though difficult to adapt the OpenLDI video interface to modern video cards.[citation needed]. SGI released a

FPD-Link

is OpenLDI. It enables longer cable lengths because of a built-in DC balance coding to reduce the effects of intersymbol interference. In the OpenLDI version

Number Nine Visual Technology

connector, the Revolution IV-FP (also called the Revolution IV-1600SW) had an OpenLDI digital interface connector for the Silicon Graphics, Inc (SGI) 1600SW

RCA connector

BNC Component RGB Component YPbPr Composite video D-Terminal DB13W3 DFP OpenLDI DIN Mini-DIN DMS-59 LFH DVI Mini-DVI Micro-DVI RCA S-Video UDI VGA Mini-VGA

Low-voltage differential signaling

performance follow-ons to FPD-Link called the LVDS Display Interface (LDI) and OpenLDI standards. These standards allow a maximum pixel clock of 112 MHz, which

List of video connectors

Gigabit Video Interface (GVIF) 1996 Digital Automotive Sony proprietary OpenLDI 1998 MDR36 LVDS Digital YPBPR (a.k.a. component video) 1990s 3 RCA or BNC

Digital Visual Interface

and FLATLINK; and its successors, the LVDS Display Interface (LDI) and OpenLDI. Some DVD players, HDTV sets, and video projectors have DVI connectors

SGI Visual Workstation

with the groundbreaking and stylistically matched 1600SW LCD, using an OpenLDI display connector that requires an accessory flat panel adapter. The SGI