For the sake of simplifying though think that the Core i3 offers only HDMI and VGA. Depending on the motherboard is what connectors you have available. For example an Core i3 can do HDMI, Display Port, DVI-D and VGA. However, we have now integrated video from the CPU (AMD APU, and HD2000 and up). Some Nvidia GeForce 240 work like that, the Quadro also (the ones we have in a few Dell workstations). I have a few machines at work, where the adapters work. The idea was that the signal is Digital, but you could use an adapter and then it would send analog. The processor could do Analog and digital signal. I call it transition because they were common 7 years ago. Basically the DVI connector was just VGA with PIN compatible for DVI monitors (it is not exactly like this, but simplified ends up like this :p)Īnyhow, then you have the transition DVI-D. Now, a video card that has a DVI-A connector, has an analog processor for the DVI, and are usually cards that have VGA and DVI (older cards). Cwils14 I did not read the whole thread, but I had a similar experience before so I researched a little bit.ĭVI has 2 formats, DVI-A and DVI-D, which stand for analog and digital.
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