|
| [January 24, 2013] |
 |
VESA Finalizes Requirements for Display Stream Compression Standard
NEWARK, Calif. --(Business Wire)--
The
Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA®) today announced the
completion of requirements for the Display Stream Compression Standard,
which is anticipated to be published in late 2013. The association first
initiated efforts for a common industry-wide standard in September 2012
and since formed alliances with other standards bodies for contributions.
VESA's objective for the Display Stream Compression Standard is to
enable increased display resolutions over existing interfaces, while
further optimizing power and hardware for portable systems. To ensure a
broad scope of the more encompassing DSC standard, VESA established a
liaison with Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG), through its parent
committee under the joint organization of the International Organization
for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission,
ISO/IEC (News - Alert) JTC 1/SC 29, and with the MIPI Alliance. The shared goal is to
have a common standard that can be used by the various organizations for
interface standards.
VESA's Display Stream Compression task group completed the definition of
requirements in late 2012 and announced a call for proposals in January
2013. The standard is expected to be published for use by the end of
2013. In contrast with other image or video compression standards, the
proposed Display Stream Compression Standard targets a relatively low
compression ratio and emphasizes visually-lossless performance, high
data throughput, low latency, low complexity, and includes special
considerations geared for future display architectures.
"Display manufacturers gain from display stream compression in many
ways," said Dale Stolitzka, VESA Display Compression Standard Task Group
chairman and meber of Samsung (News - Alert) Display's San Jose R&D Lab . "Display
technology continues to improve resolution and color depth in small and
large panel sizes. However, we are approaching the limit of how much
data we can transfer over the existing display interfaces without
increasing power, complexity and number of wires, which is the wrong
direction for a mobile device that runs on battery power. The Display
Stream Compression Standard will allow us to continue to enhance display
resolution without compromising display quality and at the same time
make devices smaller and lighter, with longer battery life."
In current practice, virtually all digital display interfaces send
uncompressed pixel data from the system graphics or video source to the
display. As display resolutions continue to increase, the data rate
across the video electrical interface has also increased. Higher display
refresh rates and color depths push rates up even further. For example,
a 4K display at 60 frames per second with a 30 bit color depth requires
a data rate of about 17.3 gigabits per second, which is the current
limit of the DisplayPort specification. Higher interface data rates
demand more power, can increase the interface wire count, and require
more shielding to prevent interference with the device's wireless
services. These attributes increase system hardware complexity and
weight and are undesirable for today's sleek product designs.
Participation in the Display Stream Compression Standard development is
available to all VESA member companies and through inter-organization
liaison agreements. For more information on VESA, 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
hardware, software, personal computer, display and component
manufacturers committed to developing and promoting the electronics
industry. VESA's established track record of creating and supporting
simple, universal and cross-product solutions for today's video and
electronics industry, such as DisplayPort, provides consumers with the
confidence necessary to explore new technology standards such as
multi-monitor streaming, direct drive capability and full HD 3D support
without confusion or difficulty. For more information about VESA, visit www.vesa.org.

[ Back To Conferencing Homepage's Homepage ]
|