Type |
Pixel Resolution |
Format |
Video Conference 4CIF |
704 x 576 |
|
Video Conference 4SIF |
352 x 240 |
|
Video Conference SIF |
704 x 480 |
|
Video Conference CIF |
352 x 288 |
|
IBM CGA |
320 x 200 |
1.6:1 |
CGA |
320 x 240 |
4:3 |
Mac II |
640 x 480 |
4:3 |
EGA |
640 x 350 |
|
VGA |
640 x 480 |
4:3 |
analog TV NTSC |
lines: 525 interlaced, 60Hz |
4:3 |
analog TV PAL (Europe) |
lines: 625 interlaced, 50Hz |
4:3 |
MDA |
720 x 350 |
|
S-VGA |
800 x 600 |
4:3 |
XGA |
1024 x 768 |
4:3 |
Apple G4 |
1152 x 768 |
6:4 |
Sun Microsystem |
1152 x 900 |
1.28:1 |
UVGA |
1280 x 1024 |
5:4 |
SXGA |
1280 x 1024 |
5:4 |
SXGA+ |
1400 x 1050 |
4:3 |
WXGA |
1366 x 768 |
1:1.78 |
WXGA |
1280 x 768 |
1:1.66 |
WXGA |
1280 x 800 |
16:10 |
WXGA |
1400 x 800 |
16:10 |
SXGAW |
1600 x 1024 |
1.5625:1 |
UXGA |
1600 x 1200 |
4:3 |
WSXGA |
1680 x 1050 |
16:10 |
WUXGA |
1920 x 1200 |
16:10 |
QXGA |
2048 x 1536 |
4:3 |
QSXGA |
2560 x 2048 |
5:4 |
QSXGAW |
3200 x 2048 |
1.5625:1 |
QUXGA |
3200 x 2400 |
4:3 |
QUXGAW |
3840 x 2400 |
1.6:1 |
WQXGA |
2560 x 1600 |
16:10 |
HD 1080i60 |
1920 x 1080 interlaced @ 60Hz |
16:9 |
HD 1080p60 |
1920 x 1080 progressive @ 60Hz |
16:9 |
HD 720p50 |
1280 x 720 progressive @ 50Hz |
16:9 |
HD 720p60 |
1280 x 720 progressive @ 60Hz |
16:9 |
HD 1080p24 |
1920 x 1080 progressive @ 24Hz (24 fps, frames per second) |
16:9 |
2160 and 4320 resolutions are only progressive, not interlaced ! |
UHD-1 2160p50 |
3840 x 2160 progressive @ 50Hz |
16:9 |
UHD-1 2160p60 |
3840 x 2160 progressive @ 60Hz |
16:9 |
UHD-1 2160p100 |
3840 x 2160 progressive @ 100Hz |
16:9 |
UHD-1 2160p120 |
3840 x 2160 progressive @ 120Hz |
16:9 |
UHD-2 4320p100 |
7680 x 4320 progressive @ 100Hz |
16:9 |
UHD-2 4320p120 |
7680 x 4320 progressive @ 120Hz |
16:9 |
UHD1 - 4k |
3840 x 2160 |
16:9 |
4k Cinema |
4096 x 2160 |
16:9 |
UHD2 - 8k |
7680 x 4320 |
16:9 |
8k Cinema |
8192 × 4320 |
17:9 |
PPI (also called pixel density, pixel per inch) is the measurement of the pixel resolution of any display (or camera or scanner, etc.). It specifies the pixel resolution within a specified space (width * height). The square below his 500 pixels by 500 pixels. By measuring it on screen, the PPI can be calculated:
1. width and height measurement in mm is changed in inch (multiply the mm with 0.03937)
2. the numbers are divided by 500
3. the results indicate the horizontal and vertical PPI