Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 14:31:35Bla, bla, bla, still no pic. Poor MacBook "owner" 🙃ok no arguments means you admit youve messed up 1:1, native, 100% and default
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:46:28Still no picwhy dont you just show a pic from your macbook lmao
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:46:28I can scale at 100% (so native)lmao NATIVE scaling is what factory set as DEFAULT
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:46:28If you actually owned Mac(Book) you would know that by simply going into Settings > Displays and see that for yourself where it quite literally says "Scaled"
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:46:28Still no pic? It is now clear why. Bounce dog.HAHAH i get you started understanding you are neck deep in your bullshit ideas already if you are reverting to insults as usual
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 13:40:011:1 is os rendering resolution to screen resolutionYou really are a certified clown, aren't you? Changing scaling is not the same as changing resolution. I can scale at 100% (so native), at 200% or 500%, my screen resolution will still be the same. Just as yours or of any other user and their machine.
100% is factory default scaling picked by hardware producer, can be ANY
macos is running 1:1 and 100% lmao, it's running 1:1 at 160% and at 75% too lmao
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 13:40:01get your head straight and use terminology everyone understands and not just your mental headcanon about what 100% is lmaoNice way to get yourself out of the trouble of being illiterate but no. Screen resolution is not scaling (but you can change both). If you actually owned Mac(Book) you would know that by simply going into Settings > Displays and see that for yourself where it quite literally says "Scaled". And you would give the pic I asked you for to destroy me and show how bad am I with my terminology, to shame me and so on, you know - your iShitter's usual kinks.
so yeah FACTORY SET 100% default scaling isn't small on macbooks and macbook is running at native 1:1 resolution
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 13:40:01Still no pic? It is now clear why. Bounce dog.Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:21:50Stop being a clown and show me the pic I asked forlmao dont pretend you havent understood thats not resolution and "default" is 100%
do you think dragging this discussion out will make you look better or something haha
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:21:501:1 is quite literally 100%. 1:2 is 200%. 1:1.5 is 150%1:1 is os rendering resolution to screen resolution
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 13:21:50Stop being a clown and show me the pic I asked forlmao dont pretend you havent understood thats not resolution and "default" is 100%
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 13:17:57lmao scaling can't be "native", "native resolution means display is rendering 1:1Wait until you learn that you can scale below 100% 😊
"native" scaling is what factory set as default
get your terminology right and then come back and we will try again lmao
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:50:19Show me 100% - 3024x1964lmao and again you mess up 1:1 and 100%, you clearly have no understanding its not the same thing
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:59:40Actually you know what, senor lmao, open Settings on your MBP, go to Displays, and under display scalings ("Use as") click on anything you want such as "Default", CMD/Ctrl + click on it and hit "Show List". Please show me that 3024x1964 (100% scaling AKA native) on top has ("Default") next to it on the right side. No photoshopping.HAHAHA now i get it, you dont even understand what those numbers mean, its not screen resolution,you are always using macbook at max resolution
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:59:403024x1964 (100% scaling AKA native)lmao scaling can't be "native", "native resolution means display is rendering 1:1
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 12:45:46again lol from someone looking at 14 inch macbook screen right now, default base 100% is different for every screen on mac, and almost everyone is using factory 100% and its not looking small and is still saying 100%.It literally isn't. Show me 100% - 3024x1964 - which you claim to be Default and even Apple doesn't claim that on their own webpage, just take a photo of your MBP with this site open.
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 12:45:46you keep messing up "100%" and "1:1", but thats your normal low-effort commenting lmaoNo I don't, you are just illiterate but that's to be expected from a loyal iSheep.
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 12:45:46lmao boring, dont jump on insults after you failed again and got caughtNo insults, you are genuinely amusing and I like to read your messages.
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:34:29Default scaling ("Larger Text", "Default", "More Space"...) on macOS (Sonoma included) for 14" is equal to 1512x982. No one sane uses 100% scaling, which would be 3024x1964, at that screen sizelmao you just googled it?
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:34:29I like it how you are patrolling this whole forum 24/7 just to immediately jump in when you see anything Apple-related being mentioned, lol. Sad life.lmao boring, dont jump on insults after you failed again and got caught
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 12:21:12lmao what? XDDefault scaling ("Larger Text", "Default", "More Space"...) on macOS (Sonoma included) for 14" is equal to 1512x982. No one sane uses 100% scaling, which would be 3024x1964, at that screen size. Custom scaling exists, yes, just like in every other OS. And it is also available for external screens, naturally.
macs do not render everything 1:1 oob like windows does, and have different "100%" for different screen resolutions. almost everyone is using macbook 14, even 13, at 100% scaling -and ui stays of the same visual size on every external monitor too
Quote from: lmao on February 19, 2024, 12:21:12why did you have to even bring macbook into conversation if you dont know and simply decided to lose the remains of your credibility again with a single sentence lmaoI like it how you are patrolling this whole forum 24/7 just to immediately jump in when you see anything Apple-related being mentioned, lol. Sad life.
Quote from: Neenyah on February 19, 2024, 12:09:13No one sane is even using a 14" MacBook Pro at 100% scaling, simply because everything is too tiny and small in general.lmao what? XD
Quote from: Logoffon on February 19, 2024, 08:55:44Because scaling simply defeats the main purpose of having a high resolution display on a desktop OS: more screen real estate to fit more contents in a single screen.Not really. No one makes 4K laptops with intention to use them at 100% scaling. No one sane is even using a 14" MacBook Pro at 100% scaling, simply because everything is too tiny and small in general. Heck even 4K at 24" monitor is unusable at 100% scaling. Those panels were designed purely with intention of using scaling to get much nicer and sharper image with better overall viewing experience. I mean, even phones are using scaling...
Quote from: Logoffon on February 19, 2024, 08:55:44Not to mention the added strain to the GPU to render 3D graphics (mainly games since this laptop is classified for gaming) in higher res.3D graphics as in apps you use, to work and such like Blender or After Effects for example? No. In games if you play them at native res then yes but if the GPU can't hold smooth 60+ fps you can play at FHD and use DLSS to get 95% of native-res image quality with 180-300% fps more (than in native without DLSS). Or you can play native with DLSS, about 98% of native-no-DLSS image quality with 50-120% fps more.
Quote from: Logoffon on February 19, 2024, 08:55:44And if MS had actually "fixed" problems with scaling, then how come many of the programs on 11 still look like they're being lazily resized from 100% with all the blur (unless I do a compatibility fixing thing)?That's the issue with those apps and them not being updated, not with MS/Windows. I have one of those and that's it, one. Everything else works flawlessly.
Quote from: Neenyah on February 18, 2024, 19:27:59Because scaling simply defeats the main purpose of having a high resolution display on a desktop OS: more screen real estate to fit more contents in a single screen. Not to mention the added strain to the GPU to render 3D graphics (mainly games since this laptop is classified for gaming) in higher res.Quote from: Hotz on February 18, 2024, 18:13:56And yes, I know you can scale down the resolution but that is bad practise.Why is it bad? Scaling is awesome since about mid 2021 when they (Microsoft) fixed all weird bugs and issues related to it.