In fact, you could probably even benefit from 1440p. If you haven’t heard of 1440p, you will.Here’s a link to some infoon Audioholics.com. It is part of the HDMI 1.3 spec, along with 48-bit color depth, and will probably surface for the public in 2009 or so. You’ll partiall...
DisplayPort 1.4a gives you reliable wired connectivity and HDMI 2.1 port that supports 4K 120Hz HDR, 8K 60Hz HDR, and variable refresh rate PCI Express Gen 4 interface allows for high-bandwith applications while maintaining compatibility with a wide range of systems ...
For now, there are three G-SYNC Pulsar displays announced for late 2024, including theASUS ROG Swift PG27AQNR, theAcer Predator XB273U F5and theAOC AGON PRO AG276QSG2, all based on the same 27″ 1440p 360Hz IPS panel, likely with DisplayHDR 600 support. ...
Up until MacOS 15.0.1, I had VRR 48-144hz on my 32" Gigabyte 4k HDR (M32U) gaming monitor @ 3360x1890 connected over Thunderbolt 3 (detected as DisplayPort). After updating to 15.1, settings are noticeably missing: HDR, VRR & 144hz modes disappear at any resolu...
Isnt this Workaround the current solution for the Scaling Issues at least for 4K Displays like TVs (3840 x 2160) with 120Hz over HDMI: Fully scalable HiDPI desktop Unlock your displays on your Mac! Flexible HiDPI scaling, XDR/HDR extra brightness, virtual ...
Yes, certainly there's some metadata (if we keep it simple and call it that) which the display returns to define maximum resolution and whether it's HDR compatible etc.. but at no point does the screen turn around and say "Hey, I'm awake, send me a signal" just because it's in ...
Note that for 720p quality and above, YouTube also supports videos at 60FPS (frames per second) instead of the standard 30FPS. Ahigher FPS results in smoother video, but also more data usage as you'd expect. YouTube also supports HDR video, which uses additional data. But as those vid...