4k on a 15 inch screen but it might as well be 720p as I only use it as a bedside clock.
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4k on a 15 inch screen but it might as well be 720p as I only use it as a bedside clock.
Work-supplied Surface Pro 4.
Display is spanking gorgeous - 2,736 x 1,824 (12.3" / 267 PPI). On the downside, battery is knackered, as is the backspace key - which encourages accuraet typign
Think I still have my old Dell laptop sat up in my loft, which is 1280 x 720.
Dell laptop with a 17" 3840 x 2160 UHD IPS screen.
I'm 4K on pretty much everything I have to look at for more than a few hours at a time.
C'mon Hexus, a bit more imagination, last week was PC screen resolution, now laptop resolution ... phone resolution next ?
Dell XPS15 (7590) with a 4K OLED screen. It's beautifully sharp in both movies, games and vids, and the deep blacks are outstanding. Even HD YT looks better on it.
High resolution displays are important to me. My desktop monitor is also 3840 x 2160. Once I'd gotten used to 4K anything lower seems soft and slightly blurred.
Thankfully it's not a gaming rig... it's a great match for my use case of pen-based illustration (the stylus has a much better feel and 'flow than the plasticy Apple pencil on an iPad), and on the move development of electronic signage solutions.
There is no better portable tool right now for my needs - and the Intel Iris Pro iGPU is actually quite grunty for my workloads (drives two displays smoothly in extended desktop mode, with lots of multi-threaded 2D/3D animation running concurrently on each panel).
Entertainment bases already covered by a reasonably beefy ATX system with AMD CPU & RTX GPU, so horses for courses ;-)
3840x2160 on a HP Spectre x360 15" touchscreen.
Quality is epic!
2560 x 1600 on a 17-inch LG Gram. It's cr@p for gaming but lovely to use for everything else.
I think it's funny how many people refer to their screens in TV terms - "full HD" or "1080p". As if there are any 1080i laptops. I'm glad we're finally starting to move away from TV aspect ratios.
3240 x 2160 on a 15" surface book 2.
2560 x 1600, it's reminded me how good 16:10 screens are. It's a 14" (or 14.5" according to Dell).
Apparently mine is 1920x1080, but I feel like that is a lie, because when I remote to my main PC, it changes to 720p and if I try to change it to 1080p everything becomes really small. And this is a 15-16" laptop...
But honestly, I am grateful to have it, because I use my laptop for school, without it I wouldn't have been able to get far in my school due to my slow handwriting because of my Autism.
I'm still on 1920x1080 60Hz on my Dell XPS 13 9360. For gaming I use my desktop anyways, this laptop just has lower-end specs to maximise battery life, so I can last a full work day without charging
Never owned a laptop.
Pretty old HP from the early 2000's. 1024x768