HDMI 2.1 also supports the latest color spaces, such as BT.2020, with 10 or more bits per color and higher frame rates in uncompressed 8K resolution video at 60 frames (4:2:0) per second and 4K video at 120 frames (4:4:4) per second. Resolutions that use Display Stream Compression (DSC) technology, like 8K at 120 Hz and 10K at 120 Hz, are only
HDMI 2.0 has been retired and is no longer being licensed. According to TFTCentral, which broke the story, new devices should no longer claim to support HDMI 2.0, all features of HDMI 2.0 are a subset of HDMI 2.1, and all of the features associated with HDMI 2.1 are optional. Devices claiming HDMI 2.1 support are supposed to list which of itsHDMI is backwards compatible but only to the in-common option sets. That means if you have and HDMI 2.1 device connected to an HDMI 2.0 device, the only options that will work without issues are the ones that are part of the HDMI 2.0 options. 1080 (HD) is not an issue but once you move up to 4k, 4k HDR, and beyond distance becomes critical, asWhile TVs with HDMI 2.1 ports are pretty much guaranteed to have eARC support, several manufacturers have added eARC support on their devices with HDMI 2.0 as well. You can check the HDMI connectors on the back of your device, and an eARC-compatible device will typically have eARC mentioned next to a connector. Originally posted by Kolysion™: Originally posted by Azza ☠: HDMI 2.1 is 48 Gbps and support 4K 120Hz with HDR just like DisplayPort 1.4 already does anyways. Note there's DisplayPort 1.4 and 1.4a. DisplayPort 2.0 will support 77 Gbps and duel 4K monitors or a single 4k at 240 Hz or single 8k at 85 Hz. Products are to use the HDMI 2.1 messaging along with the features supported by the product in the HDMI 2.1 spec. The product specifications were finalized before this change, ark.intel.com lists the Graphics output of the Intel NUC12WSHi5 as HDMI 2.1 TMDS Compatible per the requirements from the licensing body. Note. . 226 108 316 299 142 261 295 162 242