Unified Display Interface

{{Short description|Digital video interface specification}}

{{Infobox connector

| name = Unified Display Interface

| type = Digital video connector

| image =

| logo =

| caption =

| design_date = 2006 (Abandoned 2007)

| production_date = None

| superseded = HDMI

| superseded_by = DisplayPort

| superseded_by_date =

| external = Yes

| hotplug = Yes

| length = {{cvt|10.7|mm|in|2}}

| width = {{cvt|17.3|mm|in|2}}

| height = {{cvt|3.7|mm|in|2}}

| electrical =

| ground =

| maximum_voltage = +5V

| maximum_current = 0.5 A

| audio_signal = No

| video_signal = Yes

| data_signal = R,G,B data + clock and display data channel (TMDS)

| data_bit_width = 36 bit (maximum)

| data_bandwidth = 16 Gbit/s

| data_devices =

| data_style =

| cable =

| physical_connector =

| num_pins = {{ubl|22 (external)|26 (embedded)}}

| pinout_image = File:Unified Display Interface.svg

| pinout_caption = External UDI receptacles for the (R)eceiver [display] and (T)ransmitter [computer]

| pin1 = (NC)

| pin1_name = Reserved connector pin. No cable connection

| pin2 = (NC)

| pin2_name = Reserved connector pin. No cable connection

| pin3 = (NC)

| pin3_name = Reserved connector pin. No cable connection

| pin4 = GND

| pin4_name = Shield for UDI_Data2[+/-]

| pin5 = UDI_Data2+

| pin5_name = Positive side of UDI lane 2 data

| pin6 = UDI_Data2-

| pin6_name = Negative side of UDI lane 2 data

| pin7 = GND

| pin7_name = Shield for UDI_Data1[+/-]

| pin8 = UDI_Data1+

| pin8_name = Positive side of UDI lane 1 data

| pin9 = UDI_Data1-

| pin9_name = Negative side of UDI lane 1 data

| pin10 = GND

| pin10_name = Shield for UDI_Data0[+/-]

| pin11 = UDI_Data0+

| pin11_name = Positive side of UDI lane 0 data

| pin12 = UDI_Data0-

| pin12_name = Negative side of UDI lane 0 data

| pin13 = GND

| pin13_name = Shield for UDI_Clk[+/-]

| pin14 = UDI_Clk+

| pin14_name = Positive side of UDI differential reference clock

| pin15 = UDI_Clk-

| pin15_name = Negative side of UDI differential reference clock

| pin16 = GND

| pin16_name = Discrete ground wire

| pin17 = CEC

| pin17_name = Consumer Electronics Control (optional)

| pin18 = UDI_APwr

| pin18_name = UDI auxiliary power

| pin19 = UDI_CtrlClk

| pin19_name = UDI control clock

| pin20 = UDI_CtrlData

| pin20_name = UDI control data

| pin21 = UDI_EPwr

| pin21_name = Supply voltage for control link signals

| pin22 = UDI_HPD

| pin22_name = UDI link hot-plug detect

}}

Unified Display Interface (UDI) was a digital video interface specification released in 2006 which was based on Digital Visual Interface (DVI). It was intended to be a lower cost implementation while providing compatibility with existing High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) and DVI displays. Unlike HDMI, which is aimed at high-definition multimedia consumer electronics devices such as television monitors and DVD players, UDI was specifically targeted towards computer monitor and video card manufacturers and did not support the transfer of audio data. A contemporary rival standard, DisplayPort, gained significant industry support starting in 2007 and the UDI specification was abandoned shortly thereafter without having released any products.

Development

On December 20, 2005, the UDI Special Interest Group (UDI SIG) was announced, along with a tentative specification called version 0.8.{{Cite press release |publisher=Silicon Image, Inc. |title= Proposed New Interface to Bring Next-Generation Connectivity to PC Monitors and CE Devices |url= http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/051220/sftu056.html |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20051224043737/http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/051220/sftu056.html |archive-date= December 24, 2005 |date= December 20, 2005 |access-date= September 7, 2021 }}{{cite web | date = December 20, 2005 | url = http://eetuk.com/tech/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=175007227 | title = Next-gen display standard emerges for PC, HDTVs | publisher = EETimes |url-status= | access-date = August 15, 2006 }}{{deadlink|date=September 2023}} The group, which worked on refining the specification and promoting the interface, was led by Intel{{Cite web |title= Unified Display Interface (UDI) Technical Overview |author= George Hayek |publisher= Intel |url= http://www.udisig.org/news_events/idf_s06_udisig.pdf |url-status= dead |archive-date= April 9, 2006 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060409220321/http://www.udisig.org/news_events/idf_s06_udisig.pdf |access-date= September 7, 2021 }} and included Apple Computer, Intel, LG, NVIDIA, Samsung, and Silicon Image Inc.{{cite web |date= December 20, 2005 |url= http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/12/20/udisig_formation/ |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20051223153922/http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/12/20/udisig_formation/ |url-status= dead |archive-date = December 23, 2005 |title= Industry group promotes UDI as successor of VGA graphical interface |author= Wolfgang Gruener |publisher = TG Daily |access-date = September 7, 2021 }}

The announcement of UDI lagged the DisplayPort standard by a few months, which had been unveiled by the Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA) in May 2005. DisplayPort was being developed by a rival consortium including ATI Technologies, Samsung, NVIDIA, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and Molex.{{cite news |url=https://www.theregister.com/2005/12/21/unified_display_interface/ |title=PC, CE firms to develop 'unified' display connector |author=Smith, Tony |date=21 December 2005 |work=The Register |access-date=2 February 2023}} Fundamentally, DisplayPort transmits video in packets of data, while the preceding DVI and HDMI standards transmit raw video as a digital signal; UDI took an approach closer to DVI/HDMI. The UDI specification 1.0 was finalized and released in July 2006. The differences between UDI and HDMI were kept to a minimum since both specifications were designed for long-term compatibility.{{cite news |date= July 3, 2006 |url= http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=3098 |title= Unified Display Interface Nears Release |work= DailyTech |author= Tuan Nguyen |access-date= September 7, 2021 |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060713025905/http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=3098 |archive-date = July 13, 2006 }} Again, UDI lagged DisplayPort by a few months, which had released its finalized version 1.0 specification in May 2006.{{cite news |url=https://www.theregister.com/2006/05/04/vesa_completes_displayport/ |title=VESA completes DVI successor |date=4 May 2006 |author=Smith, Tony |work=The Register |access-date=2 February 2023}}

The group changed its title in late 2006 from "special interest group" to "working group" and contemporary press coverage noted that "UDI is weak when it comes to industry support", accurately predicting the future DisplayPort/HDMI duopoly.{{cite news |url=https://www.theregister.com/Print/2007/05/28/display_technologies/ |title=Any port in a storm: the display tech battle |author=Smith, Tony |date=28 May 2007 |work=The Register |access-date=2 February 2023 |quote=What we have then is a re-run of the old USB vs Firewire debate: two standards [DisplayPort and HDMI] that do, give or take a plus point or two, the same job largely as well as each other. In each case, sufficiently large industry camps have formed around each to ensure neither will vanish, and vested intellectual property and licensing interests means there's little chance of the two coming together into a single standard.}} In early 2007 Intel started supporting the rival DisplayPort standard; anonymous sources stated the licensing fees associated with HDMI and incorporation of HDCP into DisplayPort swayed Intel's support.{{cite news |url=https://www.edn.com/connecting-systems-to-displays-with-dvi-hdmi-displayport-what-we-got-here-is-failure-to-communicate/ |title=Connecting systems to displays with DVI, HDMI, DisplayPort: What we got here is failure to communicate |author=Dipert, Brian |date=January 4, 2007 |work=EDN |access-date=3 February 2023}}{{cite news |url=https://www.eetimes.com/hdmi-the-digital-display-link/ |title=HDMI: The digital display link |author=O'Donnell, Bob |date=September 5, 2007 |work=EE Times |access-date=3 February 2023}} Other vendors started to use HDMI version 1.3, and both Intel and Samsung withdrew their support from UDI. There have been no announcements made about UDI since early 2007 and the UDI website became no longer operational after 2007,{{cite web |title= Unified Display Interface Work Group |url= http://www.udiwg.org/home |work= Official web site |url-status= dead |archive-date= November 19, 2007 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071119024856/http://www.udiwg.org:80/home |access-date= September 7, 2021 }} and it appears the UDI standard was abandoned before products were released.

Technical

There were two UDI implementations: "external profile" (for desktop computers and displays) and "embedded profile" (for the internal display of a laptop computer).{{cite web |url=http://www.udiwg.org:80/udi_spec/UDI_1_0.pdf |title=Unified Display Interface Specification, Revision 1.0a Final |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928062555/http://www.udiwg.org:80/udi_spec/UDI_1_0.pdf |date=July 12, 2006 |archive-date=September 28, 2007 |url-status=dead |publisher=Unified Display Interface Working Group}}{{rp|§1.9}}

Under the external profile, data was transmitted using three differential data pairs and one differential clock pair using the TMDS encoding scheme.{{rp|§1.9.1}} The external profile is considered an extension of HDMI and is backwards-compatible with HDMI Rev. 1.2 displays; however, UDI does not carry audio information as it is targeted towards high-resolution computer monitors instead.{{rp|§1.10.1}} As HDMI is itself an extension of DVI with HDCP, UDI external profile is compatible with these standards as well.{{rp|§1.10.2;1.10.3}}

The embedded profile was slightly different, using either one or three differential pairs, each of which carried both data and clock information. The embedded profile uses an ANSI 8b/10b encoding scheme instead.{{rp|§1.9.2;3.3.1;3.3.2}}

UDI provided higher bandwidth than its predecessors (up to 16 Gbit/s in its first version, compared to 4.95 Gbit/s for HDMI 1.0) and incorporated a form of digital rights management known as HDCP.{{Cite web |date= February 19, 2007 |author=Tuan Nguyen |url=http://www.dailytech.com/The+Future+of+HDMI/article6098.htm |title=The Future of HDMI |publisher=DailyTech |access-date= September 7, 2021 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070610101554/http://www.dailytech.com/The+Future+of+HDMI/article6098.htm |archive-date= June 10, 2007 }}

=Connector=

The external and embedded connector implementations were electrically compatible and physically similar, each with a single row of contacts, but they had different form factors and contact counts. The "embedded" implementation was only specified for the display panel interface and had a single row of 26 contacts, while the "external" implementation had a single row of 22 contacts inside a metal shield with a physically keyed rectangular cross-section, resembling the USB Type A connectors.{{rp|§7.2.2;7.3.2}} The contacts were spaced on a pitch of {{cvt|0.6|mm}} (external){{rp|§7.2.2}} and {{cvt|1.0|mm}} (embedded).{{rp|§7.3.2}}

Three of the contacts were reserved for future upgrade possibilities.{{rp|§7.2.1;7.3.1}} Transmit and receive plugs and receptacles were different physically, similar to peripheral cables with USB-A and USB-B on each end, requiring the UDI cable to be plugged in one way only.{{rp|§7.2.2;7.3.2}} Bidirectional communication worked at a much lower data rate than that available for the single direction video datastream.

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:85%;text-align:center;"

|+UDI external connector pinout{{rp|Table 7-1}}

! Pin !! Signal !! class="unsortable" | Description

1

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD || Reserved; second mate

2

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD || Reserved; second mate

3

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD || Reserved; second mate

4

| Gnd || UDI Data2 shield; second mate

5

| UDI Data2+ || UDI differential data pair 2: +; second mate

6

| UDI Data2- || UDI differential data pair 2: -; second mate

7

| Gnd || UDI Data1 shield; second mate

8

| UDI Data1+ || UDI differential data pair 1: +; second mate

9

| UDI Data1- || UDI differential data pair 1: -; second mate

10

| Gnd || UDI Data0 shield; second mate

11

| UDI Data0+ || UDI differential data pair 0: +; second mate

12

| UDI Data0- || UDI differential data pair 0: -; second mate

13

| Gnd || UDI Clk shield; second mate

14

| UDI Clk+ || UDI differential reference clock: +; second mate

15

| UDI Clk- || UDI differential reference clock: -; second mate

16

| Gnd || Ground; discrete wire; second mate

17

| CEC{{efn|name=HDMI|Only applicable for UDI to HDMI}} || Consumer Electronics Control (optional); second mate

18

| UDI APwr{{efn|Required for both source and sink, for active adapters or repeaters}} || UDI auxiliary power; second mate

19

| UDI CtrlClk || UDI control clock; second mate

20

| UDI CtrlData || UDI control data; second mate

21

| UDI EPwr{{efn|name=HDMI}} || UDI power: +5V; third mate

22

| UDI HPD || UDI hot-plug detect; third mate

| Connector shell || first mate

class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:85%;text-align:center;"

|+UDI embedded connector pinout{{rp|Table 7-7}}

! Pin !! Signal !! class="unsortable" | Description

1

| VDD UDL || rowspan=4 | Supply voltage for data link circuitry

2

| VDD UDL

3

| VDD UDL

4

| VDD UDL

5

| VSS || rowspan=4 | Supply return for control and data link power

6

| VSS

7

| VSS

8

| VSS

9

| UDI Data0+ || rowspan=2 | UDI lane 0 data; only used for ×3 lane width

10

| UDI Data0+

11

| GND || Shield for UDI Data0

12

| UDI Data1+ || rowspan=2 | UDI lane 1 data; used for ×1 and ×3 lane widths

13

| UDI Data1-

14

| GND || Shield for UDI Data1

15

| UDI Data2+ || rowspan=2 | UDI lane 2 data; only used for ×3 lane width

16

| UDI Data2-

17

| GND || Shield for UDI Data2

18

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD || rowspan=3 | Reserved

19

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD

20

| style="background:#ddd;" | RSVD

21

| (Test pin)

22

| GND || Ground return

23

| UDI EPwr || Supply voltage for control link signals

24

| UDI CtrlClk || UDI control link clock

25

| UDI CtrlData || UDI control link data

26

| UDI HPD || UDI link hot-plug detect

;Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist}}