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XGA+ stands for Extended Graphics Array Plus and is a computer display standard.
XGA, the Extended Graphics Array, is an IBM display standard introduced in 1990.
SXGA is an abbreviation for Super Extended Graphics Array referring to a standard monitor resolution of 1280x1024 pixels.
The QXGA, or Quad Extended Graphics Array, display standard is a resolution standard in display technology.
With high-performance standards like Quantum Extended Graphics Array (QXGA), video cards can display millions of colors at resolutions of up to 2040 x 1536 pixels.
QUXGA (Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array) describes a display standard that can support a resolution up to 3200x2400 pixels, assuming a 4:3 aspect ratio.
WQUXGA (Wide Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array) describes a display standard that supports a resolution of 3840x2400 pixels, which provides a 16:10 aspect ratio.
WHXGA an abbreviation for Wide Hex Extended Graphics Array is a display standard that can support a resolution of roughly 5120x3200 pixels with a 16:10 aspect ratio.
Under the arrangement, Intel will develop new versions of a graphics chip set that matches an I.B.M. standard known as XGA, or Extended Graphics Array, and I.B.M. will provide chip design information.
Wide Extended Graphics Array (Wide XGA or WXGA) is a set of non standard resolutions derived from the XGA display standard by widening it to a wide screen aspect ratio.
A. XGA stands for Extended Graphics Array, a video display standard developed by I.B.M. in 1990 that works especially well for computers using a graphical user interface, like the familiar desktop motif of the Macintosh and Windows operating systems.
XGA, which stands for extended graphics array, has a screen resolution of 1,024 dots horizontally by 768 vertically, yielding 786,432 possible bits of information on screen, more than two and a half times the amount of information on a screen as the previous standard, known as VGA.
VGA was officially followed by IBM's Extended Graphics Array (XGA) standard, but it was effectively superseded by numerous slightly different extensions to VGA made by clone manufacturers that came to be known collectively as Super VGA.
TXGA, or Tesselar eXtended Graphics Array is a computer graphics resolution of 1920 x 1400 pixels, with an aspect ratio of 7:5, first defined by UK based Equipe Simulation in 2007 and demonstrated at the ITEC conference in April of the same year.