VESA - meaning and definition. What is VESA
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What (who) is VESA - definition

TECHNICAL STANDARDS ORGANIZATION FOR COMPUTER DISPLAY STANDARDS
Video Electronic Standard Association; Vesa; VESA screen modes; VESA modes; Vesa screen modes; VESA 2.0; VESA; VESA video driver

VESA         
Video Electronics Standards Association (Reference: org.)
Video Electronics Standards Association         
<body, standard> (VESA) An industry standards organisation created in 1989 or 1990 mostly(?) concerned with IBM compatible personal computers. The first standard it created was the 800 x 600 pixel Super VGA (SVGA) display and its software interface. It also defined the VESA Local Bus (VLB). See also PCI. http://vesa.org/. (1995-11-16)

Wikipedia

Video Electronics Standards Association

VESA (), formally known as Video Electronics Standards Association, is an American technical standards organization for computer display standards. The organization was incorporated in California in July 1989 and has its office in San Jose. It claims a membership of over 300 companies.

In November 1988, NEC Home Electronics announced its creation of the association to develop and promote a Super VGA computer display standard as a successor to IBM's proprietary Video Graphics Array (VGA) display standard. Super VGA enabled graphics display resolutions up to 800×600 pixels, compared to VGA's maximum resolution of 640×480 pixels—a 56% increase.

The organization has since issued several additional standards related to computer video displays. Widely used VESA standards include DisplayHDR, DisplayPort, and Flat Display Mounting Interface.

Examples of use of VESA
1. Vesa Huuskonen from the Frontier Guard General Staff.
2. "Me and Vesa, we always have a great time together," Nabokov said.
3. "Russian border officials continue their inspections normally and have not taken up extra measures", Vesa Huuskonen explains.
4. Vesa Nyrhinen, detective superintendent from the local police, declined to say how seriously the gunman was injured.
5. By Vesa Sirén The Estonian National Symphony Orchestra is playing its "end of summer" concert to a full house in Tallinn‘s Methodist Church.