From: Paulo Zanoni
If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
the EDID spec, "the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
and is only specified to accept the video timing formats that are
listed in Base EDID and certain Extension
On Fri, 2013-02-15 at 13:36 -0200, Paulo Zanoni wrote:
> From: Paulo Zanoni
>
> If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
> the EDID spec, "the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
> and is only specified to accept the video timing formats that are
> listed
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:36 AM, Paulo Zanoni wrote:
> From: Paulo Zanoni
>
> If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
> the EDID spec, "the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
> and is only specified to accept the video timing formats that are
> listed
From: Paulo Zanoni paulo.r.zan...@intel.com
If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
the EDID spec, the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
and is only specified to accept the video timing formats that are
listed in Base EDID and certain Extension Blocks.
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:36 AM, Paulo Zanoni przan...@gmail.com wrote:
From: Paulo Zanoni paulo.r.zan...@intel.com
If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
the EDID spec, the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
and is only specified to accept the
On Fri, 2013-02-15 at 13:36 -0200, Paulo Zanoni wrote:
From: Paulo Zanoni paulo.r.zan...@intel.com
If bit 0 of the features byte (0x18) is set to 0, then, according to
the EDID spec, the display is non-continuous frequency (multi-mode)
and is only specified to accept the video timing formats