- Joined
- Jun 20, 2007
- Messages
- 3,942 (0.62/day)
System Name | Widow |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7600x |
Motherboard | AsRock B650 HDVM.2 |
Cooling | CPU : Corsair Hydro XC7 }{ GPU: EK FC 1080 via Magicool 360 III PRO > Photon 170 (D5) |
Memory | 32GB Gskill Flare X5 |
Video Card(s) | GTX 1080 TI |
Storage | Samsung 9series NVM 2TB and Rust |
Display(s) | Predator X34P/Tempest X270OC @ 120hz / LG W3000h |
Case | Fractal Define S [Antec Skeleton hanging in hall of fame] |
Audio Device(s) | Asus Xonar Xense with AKG K612 cans on Monacor SA-100 |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-850 |
Mouse | Razer Naga 2014 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | FFXIV ARR Benchmark 12,883 on i7 2600k 15,098 on AM5 7600x |
" and somehow treat the single display as four Ultra HD displays. " This is the concerning part... and 4k faced it already until I think Iiyama figured out a resolution ..
Well quite a few of us have been laughing at 1080p for a long time now. The computer graphics and monitor market is to the audio visual industry what Formula 1 is to the automaker industry. All of the cutting edge stuff has an influence on what becomes common in the marketplace.
The problem with 1080p is that it's out lived it's welcome and would have been replaced by 1440p/1600p, if television manufacturers and broadcast networks weren't so lazy or behind the times. It also doesn't help that the popular console systems have only now just gotten 1080p.
1080p needs to die, and die quick.
Funny, I'm sure these arguments were had over 1080 a few years ago in here. Eventually 4k will be the norm, and further down the line 8k. I'm still pissed over the 1200p thing, why wasn't that the norm? Video cards will catch up, 4k monitors will become standard, and we'll all be laughing at the old days when we only had 1080p. Let's allow advancement, so it will become the norm.......
Well quite a few of us have been laughing at 1080p for a long time now. The computer graphics and monitor market is to the audio visual industry what Formula 1 is to the automaker industry. All of the cutting edge stuff has an influence on what becomes common in the marketplace.
The problem with 1080p is that it's out lived it's welcome and would have been replaced by 1440p/1600p, if television manufacturers and broadcast networks weren't so lazy or behind the times. It also doesn't help that the popular console systems have only now just gotten 1080p.
1080p needs to die, and die quick.