
This section provides help on the following NVIDIA Control Panel features - available with NVIDIA Quadro cards - that are specific to workstation applications:
Frame synchronization is the process of synchronizing display pixel scanning to a synchronization source. When several systems are connected, a sync signal is fed from a master system to the other systems in the network, and the displays are synchronized with each other.
Serial Digital Interface (SDI) is a digital, uncompressed high quality video format used for film and video post production and broadcast applications. The NVIDIA Quadro® SDI graphics card converts composited video and graphics to uncompressed 8-bit, 10-bit, or 12-bit SDI output.
Edge overlap adjustment lets you define an area along the edge of adjacent displays to repeat in a multiple projection system. When the adjacent projections overlap in that area, the result is better fusion of the two displays.
NVIDIA Mosaic technology lets you use multiple displays to create a larger virtual canvas.
Serial Digital Interface (SDI) is a digital, uncompressed high quality video format used for film and video post production and broadcast applications. The NVIDIA® Quadro® SDI Capture card enables multi-stream, uncompressed video to be streamed directly to Quadro SDI-enabled GPU memory.
The NVIDIA driver lets you take the EDID information from a connected display and save it to a file on your disk, and also force an EDID to be applied to a specific connector on your graphics card.
Multi-display cloning utilizes the multi-stream capability of DisplayPort 1.2 to let you present identical content on multiple DisplayPort 1.2 displays.
Engineers, artists, designers, and scientists can interact with high-performance visuals while performing simulations or renderings on the same workstation system – at the same time.
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