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{{Short description|Analog video monitor}}
{{More citations needed|date=May 2023}}
A '''multiple-sync''' ('''multisync''') '''monitor''', also known as a '''multiscan''' or '''multimode''' monitor, is a [[Raster scan|raster-scan]] [[analog device|analog]] video [[Computer display|monitor]] that can properly [[Synchronization|synchronise]] with multiple [[Horizontal scan rate|horizontal]] and [[Analog television#
Multiscan computer monitors appeared during the mid 1980s, offering flexibility as computer video hardware shifted from producing a single fixed scan rate to multiple possible scan rates.<ref>{{cite web |title=MultiSync 25th Anniversary{{Snd}} The Evolution of the MultiSync |url=http://www.nec-display.com/ap/en_display/25th/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211101010646/https://www.nec-display.com/ap/en_display/25th/ |archive-date=1 November 2021 |website=NEC Display Solutions, Ltd.}}</ref> "MultiSync" specifically was a trademark of one of [[NEC|NEC's]] first multiple-sync monitors.<ref name=":1" />
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Early [[home computer]]s output video to ordinary televisions or [[composite monitor]]s, utilizing television display standards such as [[NTSC]], [[PAL]] or [[SECAM]]. These display standards had fixed scan rates, and only used the vertical and horizontal sync pulses embedded in the video signals to ensure synchronization, not to set the actual scan rates.
Early dedicated [[
In 1984, IBM's [[Enhanced Graphics Adapter|EGA]] added a second resolution which necessitated the use of a monitor supporting two scan rates, the original CGA rate as well as a second scan rate for the new video modes.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=http://minuszerodegrees.net/oa/OA%20-%20IBM%20Enhanced%20Color%20Display%20(5154).pdf|title=IBM Enhanced Color Display Manual|pages=1}}</ref> This monitor as well as others that could be manually switched between these two sync rates were known as dual-scan displays.<ref name="InfoWorld">{{Cite book
The NEC Multisync was released in 1985 for use with the IBM PC, supporting a wide range of sync frequencies including those for CGA, EGA, various extended forms of those standards marketed by third party vendors, and standards yet to be released.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book
IBM's 1987 [[Video Graphics Array|VGA]] standard, in turn, expanded to three fixed scan rates. At this point, PC and Mac owners with multiple graphics cards required unique monitors for each of them,<ref
# [[PAL]], [[NTSC]], [[Color Graphics Adapter|CGA]]: ~15.7 kHz horizontal scan, 50 or 60 Hz vertical scan
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After 1987's [[Video Graphics Array|VGA]]. the IBM market began to develop [[Super VGA]] cards which used many different scan rates, culminating in the [[VESA BIOS Extensions|VBE]] which established standardized methods for outputting many different resolutions from one card, eventually becoming the [[Generalized Timing Formula]] which permitted graphics cards to output arbitrary resolutions.
By the late 1990s, graphics cards for microcomputers were available with specs ranging from 1024x768 at 60 Hz, to at least 1600x1200 at 85 Hz.<ref>{{Cite book
In response, VESA established a standardized list of display resolutions, refresh rates, and accompanying timing for hardware manufacturers.<ref>{{Cite book
=== Implementation ===
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== Television ==
{{
CRT televisions are typically designed to operate only with the video standard of the country they are sold in ([[PAL]], [[NTSC]], [[SECAM]]), but some sets, particularly broadcast monitors, can operate on multiple standards.
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