Quote from: A on February 29, 2020, 23:46:58
@Puppy - Lol, the visual acuity distance of someone with 20/20 vision for a 14 inch FHD screen is about 20 inches. The average viewing distance of a laptop is 20-40 inches. You really need to stick your face in your laptop for the difference to matter. Only at 15 inches or above, maybe even 17 inch does UHD start actually mattering.
@william blake - Yeah, the scaling is terrible.
I don't have 20/20 vision, nor do I have nearsightedness or farsightedness. I can see a clear difference between 1440p and 1080p on 14" panels (of similar vintage).
I suppose the next question is do I care? Yes, but not for the "extra clarity," rather for dealing with greedy applications. An absurd amount of them require more than 1000px horizontal space (at a minimum). This means I either have to deal with two overlapping applications on the display, or one application will have to give up more horizontal screen space (if it is able to). I just don't get it, do these application developers only have 5k-8k 40+" displays and have never, ever used a 1080p display? Are they self aggrandized to believe the only application I would ever want to run is their junk?
Speaking of panels, though, the previous generation of AMD laptops from Lenovo saw some of them come with Adaptive Sync panels. While the PSREF of that generation never spoke of it, I am curious if this has continued with the new panels?