
Prices and offers are non-redeemable for cash, non-transferable and may not be combined with other offers/discounts. If any of the qualifying items are removed from the cart or part of the order is cancelled or returned, the promotional savings will be void. Customers will be required to visit to redeem their offer within 30 days of the purchase date. Valid for purchases made on LG.com from to. ^Purchase one (1) qualifying LG UltraGear 850 series gaming monitor and receive a $45 gift card of your choice to either Xbox or Twitch. *Parts and accessories shipping cost may vary. Boxes, addresses outside the contiguous 48 states, international addresses, Army Post Office (APO), Diplomatic Post Office (DPO) and Fleet Post Office (FPO). Free shipping to qualifying US destinations in the contiguous United States not available for P.O. The question of which port is better is more a question of connectivity.^IFVġFree shipping not available for parts and accessories. Meanwhile, VESA designed DisplayPort to be the ultimate display interface for computers, so it complements rather than replaces HDMI. Despite the confusing cable specifications, it does things that DisplayPort can’t. HDMI was designed primarily for consumer-electronics applications: Blu-ray players, TVs, video projectors, and the like. And since some GPUs can support multiple DisplayPort interfaces, you can daisy-chain compatible monitors to connect as many as six displays to one source. A single DisplayPort interface can support up to four monitors at 1920x1200-pixel resolution each, or two monitors at 2560x1600-pixel resolution, with each display receiving independent audio and video streams. HDMI can handle a single video stream and a single audio stream, so it can drive only one display at a time. Both HDMI and DisplayPort can send high-definition digital video and audio from a source device to a display. No modern all-in-one is complete without an HDMI input that allows you to connect a gaming console or a set-top box to the computer so you can use its display for a second purpose. You’ll also find it in most consumer desktop and laptop computers.

The HDMI port is a ubiquitous port that can be found in TVs, Set-Top Boxes, Blu-ray Players, A/V Receivers, gaming consoles, camcorders, digital cameras, and even some smartphones.
