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Posts Tagged ‘digital’

What’s the Difference Between VGA and DVI?

October 19th, 2009 by Michael Louie | View Comments | Filed in Tech
DVI Connector

DVI Connector

Ever since I became equipped with a computer, I always believed the ports on the back of your graphics card have been more or less the same.  Most monitors used VGA, so I always plugged into my VGA port.

Yet, there really is a difference between VGA and DVI monitor ports.  VGA stands for Video Graphics Array which was introduced in 1987 and transmits analog singnals.  Analog signals are typically lower quality when it comes to computer video cards.

According to Wikipedia, analog signals are:

Dealing with a continuous spectrum of values as opposed to a discrete on/off value.

Digital signals, on the other hand, are defined as:

A digital system uses discrete (discontinuous) values, meaning the signal is either on or off.

VGA Port

DVI stands for Digital Visual Interface and transmits a digital signal instead and is mostly compatible with HDMI, the main differences being that HDMI ports are less clunky (they are small compared to DVI).  This means that basically, if you use a DVI cable you will get a crisper picture and a higher quality picture on your display.

CRT monitors don’t have DVI ports because the nature of CRT monitors makes them analogous.  Lower-end LCD screens may also lack DVI ports, but it’s always a great idea to check if your screen supports the DVI standard.  Also, if you computer uses HDMI, but doesn’t have a DVI port, you can buy little HDMI to DVI adapters so you can use DVI with your screen.

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Western Digital My Book Review

November 18th, 2008 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | View Comments | Filed in Offline, Reviews, Tech
Front View

Front View of Drive

The My Book is Western Digital’s flagship harddrive for desktop use.

It looks like a book, hence the name. It is a nice little drive, and the “morse code holes” as advertised on the website, do a good job of keeping the thing cool.

If you have a recent OS, like Windows XP or Vista, the drivers will install automatically (same goes for Mac OS X and Linux – just plug the thing in and it’s detected).

Inside the package there is a power brick, the drive, and 1 USB cable and 1 FireWire Cable.

Performance Specifications
Serial Transfer Rate
eSATA
Serial Bus Transfer Rate (eSATA) 3 Gb/s (Max)
FireWire 400
Serial Bus Transfer Rate (1394a) 400 Mbits/s (Max)
USB 2.0
Serial Bus Transfer Rate (USB 2.0) 480 Mbits/s (Max)
Physical Specifications
Capacity 500 GB
Interface Triple Interface
Physical Dimensions
English
Height 6.5 Inches (Max)
Length 5.4 Inches (Max)
Width 2.1 Inches
Weight 2.5 Pounds
Metric
Height 166 mm (Max)
Length 137 mm (Max)
Width 54 mm
Weight 1.15 kg
Environmental Specifications
Temperature (English)
Operating 41° F to 95° F
Non-operating -4° F to 149° F
Temperature (Metric)
Operating 5° C to 35° C
Non-operating -20° C to 65° C
Electrical Specifications
Current Requirements
Power Dissipation
AC Input Voltage 100-240 VAC
AC Input Frequency 47-63

One thing I found was that the USB and FireWire cables were a bit short if you have your drive on the ground. You might need to buy longer ones. Also, the drive is a bit heavy.

It is a good drive and will not crash on you, it is also so simple to use and the “amount of space left” meters are excellent! Just plug it into the wall and you’re set to go.

It’s a sturdy drive and I recommend it. The pricing is right too! It’s only around 100-150 dollars at Costco in Canada (the prices are changing all the time).

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