I personally prefer 4k 60 (of course, high hz is better)
I ajust zoom level according screen size, on 32” 4k, I have it mostly around 125% zoom
On my 14” i have, i think, 2550 which as well looks amazing and allows to be usable at 125% as well
I adapt zoom level according on what I am doing, I like having options to go tiny icons and a lot of space or have it big if I am e.g. in a meeting and have to adjust screen distance to be normally visible by the webcam
I meant to say 1440p144 is as a sweet spot concerning price performance ratio imho. The rest of the hardware, especially the GPU have to be considered as well.
Even on a 1440p 27" LCD I zoom in to about 133%, mostly for the viewing experience of the people I share my screen with.
I’d love an OLED with the same specs, but they are still to expensive to potentially suffer from burn in some time.
Yea, I always only share a window, so that I not have to change resolution or zoom while in meetings, very valid point
And as well for pricing, I agree (especially if you consider that you need more GPU power for more pixel), but if you are not too picky, you can get a 4k60 screen at sub 300$
1440 27” and 133% seems to me, like you have not much space to have multiple app beside each other?
I most likely sit more near the screen than most people, that may be the reason for my preferences 😄
My work environment is chaotic enough for me to have to cycle through 4 different instances of VSCode, terminals and Firefox, while simultaneously doing tech support for windows issues. I’d have switched to Linux if it wasn’t for the last bit.
I work on a 14" Laptop with 1080p60 that is the second display, while i use the 27" 1440p as the main one. I use a USB C dongle to connect and can therefore can only get 60hz because the screen will flicker otherwise (though on Linux the dongle works even for 144hz, which is above the dongle rating of 120hz, but I digress).
I’m a bit constrained with the available space, so I use only my Laptop + screen for work and only the single screen for my personal rig, which is kind of a bummer. Will opt for a 4k ~120hz ~40-50" OLED TV for my next second “monitor” though (:
1080p60 is/was the norm for a long time. 1440p144 is the current sweetspot for desktop/gaming I suppose.
I personally prefer 4k 60 (of course, high hz is better)
I ajust zoom level according screen size, on 32” 4k, I have it mostly around 125% zoom
On my 14” i have, i think, 2550 which as well looks amazing and allows to be usable at 125% as well
I adapt zoom level according on what I am doing, I like having options to go tiny icons and a lot of space or have it big if I am e.g. in a meeting and have to adjust screen distance to be normally visible by the webcam
I meant to say 1440p144 is as a sweet spot concerning price performance ratio imho. The rest of the hardware, especially the GPU have to be considered as well.
Even on a 1440p 27" LCD I zoom in to about 133%, mostly for the viewing experience of the people I share my screen with.
I’d love an OLED with the same specs, but they are still to expensive to potentially suffer from burn in some time.
Yea, I always only share a window, so that I not have to change resolution or zoom while in meetings, very valid point
And as well for pricing, I agree (especially if you consider that you need more GPU power for more pixel), but if you are not too picky, you can get a 4k60 screen at sub 300$
1440 27” and 133% seems to me, like you have not much space to have multiple app beside each other?
I most likely sit more near the screen than most people, that may be the reason for my preferences 😄
My work environment is chaotic enough for me to have to cycle through 4 different instances of VSCode, terminals and Firefox, while simultaneously doing tech support for windows issues. I’d have switched to Linux if it wasn’t for the last bit.
I work on a 14" Laptop with 1080p60 that is the second display, while i use the 27" 1440p as the main one. I use a USB C dongle to connect and can therefore can only get 60hz because the screen will flicker otherwise (though on Linux the dongle works even for 144hz, which is above the dongle rating of 120hz, but I digress).
I’m a bit constrained with the available space, so I use only my Laptop + screen for work and only the single screen for my personal rig, which is kind of a bummer. Will opt for a 4k ~120hz ~40-50" OLED TV for my next second “monitor” though (: