My understanding is that the original LCDs were analog and could plug into a standard vid card...
Then, DVI became standard...
I have a friend who has got a 2-3 year old Dell PC, and a 1 year old Dell PC. Both have CRTs and he want to equip the old PC with an LCD. I'd assume his vid card only has an analog out. And I'd also assume that even "new" LCDs can still use an analog cable (albeit not as good of a picture as DVI)... So, he should be able to use an LCD but he's stuck with analog.
Is it correct to assume that all PCs built now (i.e. an off the shelf, garden variety Dell with an integrated vid card) have DVI capability? If yes, when about did that become "standard"?
Then, DVI became standard...
I have a friend who has got a 2-3 year old Dell PC, and a 1 year old Dell PC. Both have CRTs and he want to equip the old PC with an LCD. I'd assume his vid card only has an analog out. And I'd also assume that even "new" LCDs can still use an analog cable (albeit not as good of a picture as DVI)... So, he should be able to use an LCD but he's stuck with analog.
Is it correct to assume that all PCs built now (i.e. an off the shelf, garden variety Dell with an integrated vid card) have DVI capability? If yes, when about did that become "standard"?