{"product_id":"4040849616983","title":"4040849616983","description":"• Type: DisplayPort cable • Version: 1.4 • Connection 1: DisplayPort male • Connection 2: DisplayPort male • Max. resolution: 8K@60Hz • Gold-plated: yes • Color: black\n\nDisplayPort Versions overview\n\n| Version     | Year | Maximum Bandwidth | Maximum Resolution (with DSC) |\n|-------------|------|-------------------|-------------------------------|\n| 1.0 \/ 1.1   | 2006 \/ 2007 | 8.64 Gbps         | 2560×1600 @ 60Hz              |\n| 1.2         | 2009 | 17.28 Gbps        | 3840×2160 @ 60Hz              |\n| 1.2a        | 2013 | 17.28 Gbps        | 3840×2160 @ 60Hz              |\n| 1.3         | 2014 | 32.4 Gbps         | 5120×2880 @ 60Hz              |\n| 1.4         | 2016 | 32.4 Gbps         | 7680×4320 @ 60Hz              |\n| 1.4a        | 2018 | 32.4 Gbps         | 8K @ 60Hz + HDR               |\n| 2.0         | 2019 | 80 Gbps           | 10K @ 60Hz or 4K @ 240Hz      |\n| 2.1         | 2022 | 80 Gbps           | 16K @ 60Hz                    |\n\nDisplayPort 1.2 introduced MST (Multi-Stream Transport), allowing you to connect multiple displays via a single port – ideal for workstations with multiple monitors.\n\nFrom DisplayPort 1.4, there is support for HDR (High Dynamic Range), which provides more vivid images, deeper colors, and better contrast – especially useful for 4K screens with 10-bit color.\n\nVersion 1.4a added Adaptive Sync, a technology that enables variable refresh rates and prevents tearing, which particularly benefits gamers via FreeSync or G-Sync.\n\nDisplayPort 2.0 and 2.1 build on this with higher bandwidth and better HDR performance at higher resolutions.\n\nExplanation\n\nDSC: Display Stream Compression – compression without visible quality loss, to achieve higher resolutions and refresh rates.\nMST: Multi-Stream Transport – multiple displays via one DisplayPort output.\nHDR: High Dynamic Range – better contrast, deeper colors.\nAdaptive Sync: Supports variable refresh rates (FreeSync\/G-Sync).\nGbps: Gigabit per second – data speed of the connection.\n\nConnector types per version\n\nFull-size DisplayPort: standard form, present on most desktop GPUs.\nMini DisplayPort: used on MacBooks, Microsoft Surface, and some laptops (especially before USB-C).\nUSB-C with DisplayPort Alt Mode: possible from version 1.4a and 2.0 – supports video output via USB-C port.\n\nPossible adapter options \/ adapters\n\nDisplayPort → HDMI: possible via active or passive adapter (depending on version and direction).\nDisplayPort → DVI: only Single-Link DVI with passive adapters. For Dual-Link DVI, an active adapter is needed.\nDisplayPort → VGA: only with an active adapter (digital to analog conversion).\nMini DisplayPort → HDMI\/DVI\/VGA: same as above, different connector form.\nUSB-C → DisplayPort: if the device supports DisplayPort Alt Mode.\nUSB-C → HDMI: via DisplayPort Alt Mode or separate USB-C video chip.\nDisplayPort → USB-C: not standard supported; requires special hardware (generally not compatible).\n\nAsk a product question","brand":"Abi","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":56203024499066,"sku":"4040849616983","price":19.99,"currency_code":"EUR","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0841\/3478\/9439\/files\/8_04f4f040-4082-441e-87d9-bb8b831f4ce7.jpg?v=1779580235","url":"https:\/\/www.tormino.com\/cs\/products\/4040849616983","provider":"Tormino","version":"1.0","type":"link"}