----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, June 21, 2002 10:20
AM
Subject: RE: [ukha_d] OT Convert
laptop
screen to flat monitor?
As
far as I can remember from some articles, reason is that normal CRT
monitors
and standalone screens use analogue signal input. VGA signal in PC is
converted from digital to analogue, goes on connector and into CRTs.
Standalone TFT monitors need digital signal, so every such monitor has D/A
convertor, which is expensive and one of the reasons why TFT monitors are
still much more expensive than CRT ones.
Because TFT ones are becoming more and more popular and there is no
need to convert D/A and back A/D in monitor, some graphic card
manufacturers
started producing VGA cards with digital outputs, but of course you'll need
TFT monitor that can accept that signal. Such monitors should be cheaper,
because they don't have A/D convertor, which is
expensive.
In
laptop VGA cards send digital signals, because TFT screens don't have A/D
convertor, because they cannot be detached.
I
don't know if digital signal that laptop VGA produces is the same standard
as
the VGA cards designed for external monitors. Laptop VGA card manufacturers
know exactly which TFT monitor will be attached to the card, so they can
optimize the card and don't have to follow any
standards.
But
according to this guy, it seems that it's possible to use such
cards.
Those cards can be recognized because they have different connector,
with something like + sign. It's a new standard of VGA connectors which has
been designed a while ago, and all the monitors should now have such
connector
(both analogue and digital), but obviously it's not the case yet. Connector
is
such, so you cannot plug digital monitor in analogue card and vice versa.
Monitors that can suport both signals should be able to connect to any
card.
Obviously this all didn't work in real life and seems that price of
TFT
is more conditioned upon market laws than the cost of
manufacturing.
That's all I can remember on that topic, when I read about it an
year
ago.
Cheers,
Nik