Industry Standards
Standards that are being developed in the refresh rate race to retina refresh rates.
Our new Blur Busters Logo program, for displays and devices with superlative motion performance with minimum motion...
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NVIDIA Opens Up Support for Adaptive Sync and FreeSync for Future Native G-SYNC Module Screens
NVIDIA has confirmed to TFTCentral that future G-SYNC module screens will be capable of supporting HDMI-VRR and adaptive-sync for HDMI and DisplayPort. The news came from a specification listed on a Taiwanese website for the Acer Predator XB273 X, where...
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DisplayPort 2.0 Announced: Enough Bandwidth for 1000 Hz Future
DisplayPort 2.0 has enough bandwidth firehose to handle a future 1000 Hz...
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Making Of: Why Are TestUFO Display Motion Tests 960 Pixels Per Second?
Test UFO is the world's most popular display motion test. We explain why Blur Busters standardizes on 960 pixels per second for test...
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Oh No, I’m At The Wrong Refresh Rate: How To Change Refresh Rate
Accidentally Running Gaming Monitors At 60 Hz For Weeks Embarassed readers tell me they sometimes forget to switch the refresh rate, stuck at 60Hz. You got a gaming monitor as a holiday or birthday gift. Windows doesn’t always automatically use...
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Microsoft Windows 512Hz Limit And Pixel Clock Limit
Microsoft Windows can't do more than 512Hz refresh rate at any...
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VESA Announces “DisplayHDR Version 1.0” Specifications
VESA DisplayHDR specifications aim to provide HDR standardization, include three tiers; entry tier "400" (nits), middle tier "600" (nits), and enthusiast tier "1000"...
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HDMI 2.1 Specification Announced
HDMI 2.1 with 48Gbps bandwidth allows Dynamic HDR, 4k120, 8k60, 10k, variable refresh rate, and...
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VESA Introduces EDID Successor “DisplayID 2.0”
DisplayID 2.0 to replace EDID, supports HDR, VR, 4K and higher resolutions, 120Hz and higher refresh...
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Blur Busters Working On Changes To HTML 5.2
Mark Rejhon – aka Chief Blur Buster – is now W3C Invited Expert As creator of Blur Busters as well as TestUFO, I also have industry standards writing experience (XMPP extension XEP-0301) and a peer reviewed conference paper (display pursuit camera...
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VESA adopts AMD’s FreeSync Proposal
Regular readers of Blur Busters are aware of AMD’s FreeSync answer to NVIDIA GSYNC. This hardware.fr article confirms that the specification change request has been accepted by VESA, a standards organization. This adds variable refresh rate support to DisplayPort 1.2a (aka FreeSync). Variable refresh...
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DisplayPort 1.2a Specification Change Request for Industry Standard Variable Refresh Rate
Hot on the heels of NVIDIA G-SYNC, AMD demonstrated FreeSync, something more easily done with laptop controllers (which can dynamically change refresh rate, but for power saving purposes). To bring FreeSync to desktop monitors, AMD applied for a DisplayPort 1.2a...
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