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China IT

China Launches GPMI, a Powerful Alternative To HDMI and DisplayPort (tomshardware.com) 69

AmiMoJo writes: The Shenzhen 8K UHD Video Industry Cooperation Alliance, a group made up of more than 50 Chinese companies, just released a new wired media communication standard called the General Purpose Media Interface or GPMI. This standard was developed to support 8K and reduce the number of cables required to stream data and power from one device to another. According to HKEPC, the GPMI cable comes in two flavors -- a Type-B that seems to have a proprietary connector and a Type-C that is compatible with the USB-C standard.

Because 8K has four times the number of pixels of 4K and 16 times more pixels than 1080p resolution, it means that GPMI is built to carry a lot more data than other current standards. There are other variables that can impact required bandwidth, of course, such as color depth and refresh rate. The GPMI Type-C connector is set to have a maximum bandwidth of 96 Gbps and deliver 240 watts of power. This is more than double the 40 Gbps data limit of USB4 and Thunderbolt 4, allowing you to transmit more data on the cable. However, it has the same power limit as that of the latest USB Type-C connector using the Extended Power Range (EPR) standard. GPMI Type-B beats all other cables, though, with its maximum bandwidth of 192 Gbps and power delivery of up to 480 watts.

China Launches GPMI, a Powerful Alternative To HDMI and DisplayPort

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  • My guess is this will not be much of a product in the end. But they are demonstrating they can do it and indeed, they can. Well, with the US in steep decline, somebody has to take over. It would have been nice if that had not been China, but it could have been worse.

    • I fixed the subject for you. USB4 version 2.0 (yes, I agree it's a dumb numbering scheme) has an 80 Gbps symmetric mode and 120/40 Gbps asymmetric mode. So they've announced a sometimes-proprietary cable that has a standard connector, but the standard connector runs slower than what the rest of the world decided on 2+ years ago. Being late to the party with a slow cable is not a flex.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        And if you had read the article instead making an ass out of yourself, you would know you are wrong.

      • Holy fuck, what confident ignorance.

        The target here is HDMI. Everyone knows that DP can handle 8K over USB-C just fine.
        The problem is that HDMI2.2 still isn't here, and HDMI2.1 is way, way, behind.
        DisplayPort does not handle media-center requires like ARC and CEC.
        Could they have just pumped HDMI framing over the 120Gbps channels? Yes. They could have. But they wouldn't be able to call it HDMI.
        Could they have made this "GPMI" higher bandwidth? Yes, they could have, but there wasn't a need- and lowest b
        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          HDMI 2.1 is extremely common now, and supports 8K up to 120 Hz. What exactly do you think they currently need that's beyond that, such that they decided to make a new, incompatible format instead of using HDMI 2.2, which was announced before this? Your "annoyed waiting" hypothesis makes no sense at all.

  • Obligatory XKCD (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Zak3056 ( 69287 ) on Monday April 07, 2025 @05:11PM (#65287973) Journal

    Standards [xkcd.com].

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Usually this cartoon is overused, but in this case I agree, there are too many "standards" of high-def video ports. Barring some necessary feature, use EXISTING SHIT, xi!

      • ... there are too many "standards" of high-def video ports. Barring some necessary feature, use EXISTING SHIT, xi!

        From TFS:

        Because 8K has four times the number of pixels of 4K and 16 times more pixels than 1080p resolution,
        it means that GPMI is built to carry a lot more data than other current standards.

        • Wake me up when you can buy 8K content.

        • by printman ( 54032 )

          Thunderbolt 5 is already shipping, supports 120Gbps (more than 96), and supports 8k video...

          • Only with DisplayPort framing, and DisplayPort doesn't support ARC or CEC, hence GPMI.
            This isn't an attempt at replacing DisplayPort, it's frustration with the lack of HDMI2.2 to give us a media-focused transport that can accommodate what DisplayPort has been able to do for a while, now.
          • You did read the title, right? The one that said "China launches HDMI and DisplayPort alternative — GPMI boasts up to 192 Gbps bandwidth, 480W power delivery"? That's a tad more than 120Gbps.

            • by printman ( 54032 )

              You did read the title, right? The one that said "China launches HDMI and DisplayPort alternative — GPMI boasts up to 192 Gbps bandwidth, 480W power delivery"? That's a tad more than 120Gbps.

              The Slashdot story only says 240W and 96Gbps, and the title says nothing. I didn’t bother reading TFA because honestly I could care less about 8k.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          From TFS:

          Because 8K has four times the number of pixels of 4K and 16 times more pixels than 1080p resolution, it means that GPMI is built to carry a lot more data than other current standards.

          Don't care. The whole point of standards is compatibility. We already have two standards for no obvious reason. DisplayPort should never have been made. It has no real reason for existing other than perhaps HDMI being too slow to adapt to the needs of the computer market. And arguably, USB-C is a third standard.

          A fourth standard just means even more devices with different connectors and extra cables and dongles to convert between incompatible standards. No. F**k that s**t.

          You want to make a new stand

          • DisplayPort should never have been made.

            I would counter just the opposite, HDMI, an industry standard with fees should not exist when an open VESA standard existed and has consistently been ahead in terms of bandwidth versus HDMI (and physically is a better connector as well). Like DP2.1 beats HDMI2.1 on just about every front.

            The only reason HDMI exists as I can remember is the industry wanted DRM built into the spec via HDCP since they were in their full anti-piracy mode and were freaked about people "stealing content" via cable capture. Fat

            • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

              I would counter just the opposite, HDMI, an industry standard with fees should not exist when an open VESA standard existed and has consistently been ahead in terms of bandwidth versus HDMI (and physically is a better connector as well). Like DP2.1 beats HDMI2.1 on just about every front.

              The only reason HDMI exists as I can remember is the industry wanted DRM built into the spec via HDCP since they were in their full anti-piracy mode and were freaked about people "stealing content" via cable capture. Fat lo

              • As someone in the ProAV field for 20 years HDMI over 15ft is spotty without active cables and 15ft with DP can work fine.

                DP today imo is superior in almost every way except for availability of gear. In my entire career HDMI has been anywhere from great to a nightmare, especially in the early days when HDCP was new and fucking with everything so maybe I am jaded.

                • DisplayPort is fine, it's just not media focused.
                  You lack things that people expect like ARC and CEC.

                  I think in a perfect world, DisplayPort would make it their focus to replace HDMI since they're already the technically superior transport, but they are not doing so, and so DP is not at feature-parity with HDMI for the concerned applications.
  • by drainbramage ( 588291 ) on Monday April 07, 2025 @05:15PM (#65287983) Homepage

    Information poor article, anyone surprised?
    What are the length restrictions for the advertised speed/power specifications?
    Are their licensing requirements?
    What ever.

  • Is it adequate to the task? Is it license-free?

    If it's free, it could be a successor to DisplayPort.

  • Instant failure (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Monday April 07, 2025 @05:21PM (#65287999)

    The biggest immediate problem they will face is the cables because of the USB-C connector that isn't USB-C. The second issue is going to be the video encoding because no chips support it. I can understand being against HDMI because it's proprietary but snubbing display port is just stupid. Hell, if they had just taken display port and then added dedicated pins for power, it still would have been better than this. The only way this will get any traction is if China mandates it.

    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      WTF do you need power on the same cable as the data?
      Whats wrong with a separate power cord for a monitor?

      • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Monday April 07, 2025 @05:40PM (#65288041) Homepage

        You could as easily ask, why do you need a separate cable for power if you can support power and data with a single cable?

      • WTF do you need power on the same cable as the data?
        Whats wrong with a separate power cord for a monitor?

        WTF? Less cabling is ALWAYS preferred.

        • Audio/video is an area where certain people may want conditioned power. It is easier to do that if it is power alone.
          • Yes, we call those people "stupid" in the engineering field given their devices already contain power conditioning systems. Though we colloquially call them "power supplies".
            Also nothing is stopping you from conditioning the power, and to date precisely zero standards of shared power / data have resulted in precluding the splitting up of them. This will be essential because even if this connector does become a reality there are virtually zero devices out there these days that only provide one connection sta

            • Yes, we call those people "stupid" in the engineering field given their devices already contain power conditioning systems. Though we colloquially call them "power supplies".

              Your car also has wheels but they are not all the same either. There is a huge audible difference between good power supplies and shitty ones, it is a very important component. Feeding them power that is consistent and in spec is also useful, no matter how much you may not believe.

              • by Entrope ( 68843 )

                The people who create the standards for these interfaces would probably be (rightfully) insulted if you said they weren't writing a spec against which devices can be "consistent and in spec". The whole point of standards bodies like USB-IF is to make sure different companies agree on what "consistent and in spec" should mean, particularly in terms of balancing the interests of different inplementers.

                • The people who create the standards for these interfaces would probably be (rightfully) insulted if you said they weren't writing a spec against which devices can be "consistent and in spec". The whole point of standards bodies like USB-IF is to make sure different companies agree on what "consistent and in spec" should mean, particularly in terms of balancing the interests of different inplementers.

                  This is probably true, but it is also true that USB is the least desirable transport option for digital audio with some rare exceptions, and especially so if you are also powering anything with it at the same time, so yeah. Noted and filed.

          • Audio I can understand, but hasn't video been exclusively digital for some time now?
          • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

            No it's not, and supporting power on a data cable doesn't preclude a separate power cable anyway.

            Doing your best SuperKendall impression again.

            • supporting power on a data cable doesn't preclude a separate power cable anyway.

              This is true. I suspect that is what people will continue to do like with HDMI or DisplayPort.

          • Then those "certain people" can plug the optional power cable in and use that, while the rest of us can use the single cable for both power and data.

        • WTF? Less cabling is ALWAYS preferred.

          Not if you work for a cable manufacturer, especially one trying to sell over-priced gold-tipped cables to people who don't understand how digital signal transmission works.

          • Gold is a good conductor even on cheap cables, and cables absolutely make a difference to analog audio. The ones and zeroes probably don't care as much about cables so long as they don't introduce uncorrectable jitter or otherwise unwanted interference. Once they hit the DAC though it is amazing how different the very same sequence of ones and zeroes can sound.
      • Plenty of things. From the convenience of it, to the management of cables, to in some cases the looks of it, the entire industry is moving to single cable powered solutions. Also why do you presume it's to power the monitor?

        I have a single cable display + power solution here, and the monitor is *providing* the power and already has a separate power cord.

      • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

        laptop users. One cable from the display to the laptop, with the display powering the laptop. probably also for most desktops, removing the need for a dedicated power supply in the desktop except for gaming PCs with dedicated GPUs

        Apple's new super mega ultra computer only uses 200w, it will run off most high end monitors that support 240w out. Needing a dedicated power cable for your PC is going to look really silly in a couple of years as power demands continue to shrink. I can't imagine USB-C will

      • You could power devices such as media hubs (ie, Fire Stick), cable boxes, game consoles, etc...

        Depending on which direction(s) the power goes, you could also power monitors. One less cable. (eyes the trio of cables running into my monitor)

    • The only way this will get any traction is if China mandates it.

      It will get traction of the industry body is large and influential enough. Consumers don't decide this shit, manufacturers do. The question is if they can convince the Samsungs and LGs of this world to adopt it. As it stands HDMI is deficient in this area, and can't provide uncompressed 8K at 60Hz and you just need to look to consumer TVs in general to see how Displayport simply isn't a thing outside of computer monitors.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's an alt mode for USB C. The cables are real USB cables.

      It will gain traction because the ports will be compatible with DP over USB and standard USB Power Delivery, but offer more features with compatible hardware.

      Consumers are already used to that, where official/certified cables and devices offer better performance. Apple started doing it years ago with chargers.

    • DisplayPort is not a replacement for HDMI.
      I see this stupid shit pasted all over this article. Have none of you wondered why your TV doesn't have a DisplayPort?

      It is completely true that DP is flatly better for the sole purpose of moving video frames over a cable, but the fact of the matter is, it's not at feature-parity with HDMI.
  • Which is transitioning off baseband to IP Video workflows with either SMPTE-2110, IPMX and SDVoE. Maybe for gaming and general TV use but we are just getting DP2.1 support in the past 24 months finally.

    It's still quite cool to push that much bandwidth down a cable but as others have said here it's kind of a dead end unless they submit this to VESA as maybe DP3.0?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      China alone is a huge market. This is the start of their big push for next gen displays and laptops. Instead of waiting for Western standards orgs to catch up and then releasing along with Western manufacturers, they will just move past us. Again.

      • Perhaps, but maybe they just don't care so much about the markets outside China, specifically the USA, since their products are being hit left, right, and centre with tariffs and sanctions. They basically have to go it alone. The USA can buy from South Korea and leave China to work out its own solutions.

        More generally, I am reminded of SCART. That was a standard that Europe adopted but not many other places. Still, there was no shortage of devices with that, but they also had the other connectors too, so it

  • by nightflameauto ( 6607976 ) on Monday April 07, 2025 @05:47PM (#65288051)

    Is there a practical home-use for an 8k monitor/TV? I'm all for the more is more philosophy, but I think at home sizes there's a point of diminishing returns that, if we haven't crossed it, we've got to be approaching. I have a 65" 4k TV that I sit only about 8 feet away from, and I honestly don't know how much more crisp that image needs to get. And I'm not sure most homes have room for something bigger. I suppose I *COULD* go up to 75" if I wanted to start soaking up the walkway around the living room, but how far are we gonna push the "more pixels" thing?

    • Me and my family cant tell the difference when actually watching a movie on a 50inch tv between 720, 1090, 4k. I'm not talking comparison where people are not watching the movie but looking for differences.

      Cartoon, animated anime stuff I can almost get away with 480 without people noticing.

    • 8K in VR would be immensely noticeable.
    • 8K may be pushing it but objectively resolutions larger than 4K are already common both in single devices, and in situations where you may want to daisy chain devices (I'm pushing 2x 4k displays here over a single USB connector already). If these were gaming monitors it already wouldn't work due to bandwidth limits.

    • by ljw1004 ( 764174 )

      Is there a practical home-use for an 8k monitor/TV?

      I think there is for sports. Watch soccer on a 4k TV. The camera is usually pulled back far enough to see a lot of the field, so each individual player on a 4k screen (3840x2160) is about 150 pixels tall, and the number of their jersey is about 30 pixels tall. That's usually not enough for me to make out what's happening. I can make it out better live in person. An 8k screen I think would be enough to make it out. I'd sit closer to it than your 8' if I wanted to watch. (Likewise, at IMAX I like to sit about

    • I had to move my sitting position from 24ft to 12ft to tell the difference between 1080p and 4K on my 106in home projection screen. I do not expect i could tell the difference between 4K and 8K at that same distance.

      When sitting much closer to a computer, I will likely see the difference. Most likely, many applications will have problems with fonts being too small to read.

      Unfortunately, scaling issues vary from one app to another, and this is not easily correctable. It is already an issue on my two 32in 4K

    • Agreed.
  • ...by having every frame of video relayed through Beijing?

  • Does this new standard include telemetry to report the Chinese government how it is being used and what data is being transmitted? Does it allow for the display to be remotely disabled if disfavorable content is viewed?

  • HDMI 2.2 - 96 Gbps
    Thunderbolt 5 - 80 Gbps
    USB4 v2 - 80 or 120/40 Gbps

    Double the power? It's still only 48V, so that means double the current. I guess that's one reason the Type B connector is twice as big - double the power wires and double the signal.

    • Additionally, apparently the 192Gbps mode is single direction, which makes sense for a display.
      GPIM has up to 8 24G channels.
      USB4 v2 has 4 lanes, which are 40G each. Giving 80/80 symmetric or 120/40 asymmetric bandwidth.

      It's not more advanced technology, just more wires in the cables, and in the case of Type-C, it can go 4x24Gbps in a single direction, instead of 3x40+1x40

      Power delivery is a physical current capability limitation.
      48V is as high as you can go without getting dangerous.
      Push the current too hi

    • TB5 is also 80 or 120/40. It and USB4 v2 share the same specification for this.
      TB5/USB4 also aren't really comparisons. They only support those speeds in CIO mode.
      DP-Alt is still limited to 80Gbps.
  • An old timer from various IEEE committees told me that it's tough to find sanction-safe ways for Americans to work with Chinese on global standards committees. This is a big problem because the Chinese companies (specifically Huawei in his case) are happy to throw a ton of engineers at the committees while western companies just drip feed them in their spare time.

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