pctechguide.com

  • Home
  • Guides
  • Tutorials
  • Articles
  • Reviews
  • Glossary
  • Contact

Graphic Card Resolution

Resolution is a term often used interchangeably with addressability, but it more properly refers to the sharpness, or detail, of the visual image. It is primarily a function of the monitor and is determined by the beam size and dot pitch (sometimes referred to as line pitch). An image is created when a beam of electrons strikes phosphors which coat the base of the monitor’s screen. A group comprising one red, one green and one blue phosphor is known as a pixel. A pixel represents the smallest piece of the screen that can be controlled individually, and each pixel can be set to a different colour and intensity. A complete screen image is composed of thousands of pixels and the screen’s resolution – specified in terms of a row by column figure – is the maximum number of displayable pixels. The higher the resolution, the more pixels that can be displayed and therefore the more information the screen can display at any given time.

Resolutions generally fall into predefined sets and the table below shows the series of video standards since CGA, the first to support colour/graphics capability:

Date Standard Description Resolution No. colours
1981 CGA Colour Graphics

Adapter

640×200

160×200

None

16

1984 EGA Enhanced Graphics

Adapter

640×350 16 from 64
1987 VGA Video Graphics

Array

640×480

320×200

16 from 262,144

256

1990 XGA Extended Graphics Array 1024×768 16.7 million
SXGA Super Extended Graphics Array 1280×1024 16.7 million
UXGA Ultra XGA 1600×1200 16.7 million

The lack of a widely accepted standard for >VGA pixel addressabilities was a problem for manufacturers, system builders, programmers and end users alike. The matter was addressed by the Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) – a consortium of video adapter and monitor manufacturers whose goal is to standardise video protocols – who developed a family of video standards that were backward compatible with VGA but offered greater resolution and more colours. For a while – prior to the emergence of the XGA family of definitions – VESA’s VGA BIOS Extensions (collectively known as Super VGA) were the closest thing to a standard.

Typically, an SVGA display can support a palette of up to 16.7 million colours, although the amount of video memory in a particular computer may limit the actual number of displayed colours to something less than that. Image-resolution specifications vary. In general, the larger the diagonal screen measure of an SVGA monitor, the more pixels it can display horizontally and vertically. Small SVGA monitors (14in diagonal) usually use a resolution of 800×600 and the largest (20in+ diagonal) can display 1280×1024, or even 1600×1200, pixels.

Display

XGA was developed by IBM and was originally used to describe proprietary graphics adapters designed for use in Micro Channel Architecture expansion slots. It has subsequently become the standard used to describe cards and displays capable of displaying resolutions up to 1024×768 pixels.

VESA’s SXGA standard is used to describe the next screen size up – 1280×1024. SXGA is notable in that its standard ratio is 5:4, while VGA, SVGA, XGA and UXGA are all the traditional 4:3 aspect ratio found on the majority of computer monitors.

Pixels are smaller at higher resolutions and prior to Windows 95 – and the introduction of scaleable screen objects – Windows icons and title bars were always the same number of pixels in size whatever the resolution. Consequently, the higher the screen resolution, the smaller these objects appeared – with the result that higher resolutions worked much better on physically larger monitors where the pixels are correspondingly larger. These days the ability to scale Windows objects – coupled with the option to use smaller or larger fonts – affords the use far greater flexibility, making it perfectly possible to use many 15in monitors at screen resolutions of up to 1024×768 pixels and 17in monitors at resolutions up to 1600×1200.

The table below identifies the various SVGA standards and indicates appropriate monitor sizes for each:

800×600 1024×768 1152×882 1280×1024 1600×1200 1800×1440
15in YES YES
17in YES YES YES YES
19in YES YES YES
21in YES YES

All SVGA standards support the display of 16 million colours, but the number of colours that can be displayed simultaneously is limited by the amount of video memory installed in a system. The greater number of colours, or the higher the resolution or, the more video memory will be required. However, since it is a shared resource reducing one will allow an increase in the other.

  • How Do Computers Make Pictures?
  • Graphic Card Resolution
  • Graphic Card Colour Depth
  • Graphic Card Components
  • Graphic Card Memory
  • Graphic Card Driver Software
  • 3d Accelerated Graphic Cards
  • Graphic Card Geometry
  • 3D Rendering
  • FSAA Graphic Card Technology
  • Digital Graphic Cards
  • DVI Graphic Cards
  • HDCP Technology
  • Graphic Card HDMI Ports
  • Graphic Card Display Port
  • Unified Display Special Interest Group
  • DirectX
  • OpenGL technology
  • Direct3D
  • Talisman
  • Fahrenheit Graphic Cards
  • SLI Technology
  • CrossFire Graphic Cards

Filed Under: Graphics Cards

Latest Articles

How To Create A Windows Start Up Disk

You're going to need a Windows 98 Startup Disk to partition and format your PC's hard drive and then to provide CD-ROM support for the re-installation of Windows 98 itself. This is a bootable system disk that supports the FAT32 file system and contains a collection of real-mode Windows 98 commands … [Read More...]

CD-ROM XA

As a separate extension to the Yellow Book introduced in 1988 by Philips, Sony and Microsoft, the CD-ROM XA specification comprises the following: Disc format including Q channel and sector structure using Mode 2 sectors Data retrieval structure based on ISO 9660 including … [Read More...]

CMOS Digital Cameras

1998 saw CMOS sensors emerge as an alternative image capture technology to CCDs. The CMOS manufacturing processes are the same as those used to produce millions of processors and memory chips worldwide. As these are … [Read More...]

Gaming Laptop Security Guide: Protecting Your High-End Hardware Investment in 2025

Since Jacob took over PC Tech Guide, we’ve looked at how tech intersects with personal well-being and digital safety. Gaming laptops are now … [Read More...]

20 Cool Creative Commons Photographs About the Future of AI

AI technology is starting to have a huge impact on our lives. The market value for AI is estimated to have been worth $279.22 billion in 2024 and it … [Read More...]

13 Impressive Stats on the Future of AI

AI technology is starting to become much more important in our everyday lives. Many businesses are using it as well. While he has created a lot of … [Read More...]

Graphic Designers on Reddit Share their Views of AI

There are clearly a lot of positive things about AI. However, it is not a good thing for everyone. One of the things that many people are worried … [Read More...]

Redditors Talk About the Impact of AI on Freelance Writers

AI technology has had a huge impact on our lives. A 2023 survey by Pew Research found that 56% of people use AI at least once a day or once a week. … [Read More...]

11 Most Popular Books on Perl Programming

Perl is not the most popular programming language. It has only one million users, compared to 12 million that use Python. However, it has a lot of … [Read More...]

Guides

  • Computer Communications
  • Mobile Computing
  • PC Components
  • PC Data Storage
  • PC Input-Output
  • PC Multimedia
  • Processors (CPUs)

Recent Posts

Pokémon Go – Extend Your Battery Life For Android and iOS

Your Phone Battery is About to Die!!!! I know I'm not the only one out and about looking for Pokémon. At the park the other day I saw nearly 100 … [Read More...]

Everything You Need to Know About Video Editing Programs

The demand for video marketing services is skyrocketing. In Europe alone, the market for video marketing is projected to be worth $673 million by … [Read More...]

Migration Software From Windows XP To 7

Migration Software From Windows XP To 7 In this particular article, we will discuss three applications that enable the user to smoothly migrate … [Read More...]

[footer_backtotop]

Copyright © 2025 About | Privacy | Contact Information | Wrtie For Us | Disclaimer | Copyright License | Authors