Quote from: cajbo on July 16, 2020, 11:33:40
I've always found these debates about what is the one true superior ratio a bit weird. It depends on the specific application...
I don't have a problem with 16:9 as long as the display is big enough. And has appropriate resolution. It gives me the vertical space I want for work and the extra horizontal space can come in handy - it can replace separate monitors without any bezels in the way (it's great when you can easily partition and organize the screen). 21:9 could be even better but it's a struggle to get a big enough screen to have the vertical space I want and the resolutions are not great either.
In a laptop, what I find ridiculous is the big bottom bezel you tend to get with 16:9. Because you still have keyboard and touchpad. The chassis would probably fit a 8:5 screen. From experience, I know that 8:5 15.4" is good enough for me. To get the same vertical space in a 16:9 format, I would have to go with a 17.3" laptop. Those are significantly bigger and the selection is even more limited. In smaller laptops, 3:2 would be preferable. I can live with narrower screen (I use the extra width for ancillaries while I always use the full height for my primary working space, I never split height). Vertical space is critical for me (I primarily work with text). Essentially, aspect ratio dictates how small I can go on a laptop (up to a point). A smaller screen can have the same resolution and display the same thing, but it's going to be smaller and therefore more difficult to see.
8:5 is actually pretty close to the golden ratio (it's roughly 1.618 and 8:5 is 1.6). And it's true that I find 8:5 pretty pleasing. 16:9 looks to me unnaturally narrow. In a cinema, I have no problem with a very wide screen. In a laptop, no, thank you.