If you were rich enough, could have only used displays with RGB-BNC.
Or maybe they’re kinda crazy and used Component video with a TV screen. (Or composite…)
Or maybe they’re just not that old.
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boonhet@sopuli.xyz 22 hours agoWhat did you use then? I remember cheap monitors in the early 00s ONLY having VGA. By the time I’d moved on, HDMI was so ubiquitous, I skipped DVI instead.
If you were rich enough, could have only used displays with RGB-BNC.
Or maybe they’re kinda crazy and used Component video with a TV screen. (Or composite…)
Or maybe they’re just not that old.
I’ve never even heard of video over BNC, and my searches turn up SCART adapters, so I’m guessing it was a British thing?
I think we were talking about computer monitors, not televisions.
BNC connections were used on professional level video equipment, if you were rich enough, you could get an extremely high quality computer monitor and video card that used those.
Older computers, especially early home computers sometimes just had composite connectors to a TV. Older computer monitors often had a composite input, but SCART was also an option.
Higher end computer monitors sometimes had similar inputs to early HDTVs, there’s a lot of crossover.
Well there you go, I’m not a professional anything except idiot. I’d never heard of that! Cool.
Cheap monitors at Walmart still typically have VGA available. Guess someone who’s buying a monitor at Walmart is a bit of a special case though.
StrongHorseWeakNeigh@piefed.social 21 hours ago
Very legitimate possiblity OP was born in the early 00’s