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I still prefer DVI for its satisfyingly solid and chunky connectors, with positive retention screws. I've seen bent pins but I don't think I've seen anyone completely break one in the way that HDMI does.
Sadly DVI connectors are thicker than my laptop.
"USB Type-C will replace DisplayPort, which replaced HDMI, which replaced DVI, which replaced VGA, which is what every projector still uses." - Shaun McCance https://twitter.com/shaunm/status/577943078553661440
Huh ? The DisplayPort protocol won't be replaced. USB Type-C just allows using the DP protocol with the USB connector. It'a just a alternative.

Let's see how much time it takes for GPUs to remove DP ports ....

The good thing about dedicated video connectors is that with simple checks (pin 5 and 7 in short circuit), you can detect and output via passive connector adapters. That's why a DP to VGA adapter is so cheap: is is the PC that is detecting and generating the VGA signal. (See DP++ for when you are missing pins)
This is an extremely low content article. Certainly not worth posting on HN. I was expecting some in depth discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of each connector and its underlying protocol. Instead it's a tiny one paragraph definition of each. Terrible.
....and the content is copied from Wikipedia. What's the actual value of this "article" ?
Analog:

- VGA: video card to computer monitor. Multiple resolutions and refresh rates. Additional display information available on connection allowing auto configuration. Point to point.

- SCART: appliance to TV connector. Audio and multiple video signal formats on the same cable. Handover signaling (tells the TV to switch to a specific input).

Digital:

- DVI: analog or digital connector (VGA fallback). Display information. Limited pixel rated. Point to point.

- HDMI: DVI without analog support, but audio signal multiplexed. Content protection. TV oriented: 1.0: Full-HD 60Hz. 3D, 4K, etc required standard updates. Inter-device signaling (CEC: remote control commands routing.)

- DP: PC oriented video signal: bandwidth oriented, multiple display video signals over a single cable: switch or daisy chaining for splitting. USB multiplexed. Audio multiplexed. Does not care about your refresh rate or resolution, only that you pixel rate is within the limits.

> It’s important to note that all HDMI cables are the same, so don’t go spending big bucks on HDMI cables.

This is only partially true, there are plenty of low-spec junk HDMI cables that people try to reuse only to find it doesn't support some part of the newer specs. Agree that you shouldn't spend a ton of money on them though.