At 4K, this means a custom resolution of 3200 x 1800. At 1440p, we're talking about 2133 x 1200. At 1080p, pixel density on most displays is already quite low, so we'd avoid scaling there if at
Hi all, I have a Dell S2721DGF (1440p 165hz) as my main and got a Dell S2721QS (4K 60hz) as a secondary. On the desktop, the top of 1440p monitor is effectively in the middle of the 4k monitor when im dragging things (see picture), so when I drag windows from left to right, I have to find "the hole" in monitor 2 to drag in to 1. Outside of scaling the 4K monitor down to 1440p hello, i try to run 4 monitors on FE 4090 (2 x49 with each 5120x1440, 1 4k ), when adding a 2560x1440 or second 4k) then i always have one monitor in settings that can not be extended and is in status not active. This is not specific to version 2.1 of HDMI and it is not specific to HDMI either. It is the same reason 10 years ago we had some monitors with "HDMI 1.4" that are limited to 1080p 60 Hz while others can do 1080p 144 Hz, and today some "DP 1.4" monitors that support HBR3 while some don't. If you're asking if you'll be able to use the 1440p external monitor with your 1080p laptop, yes you can. 3080 will push a 1440p nicely. You can hook up any resolution of external to a laptop, the laptops screen resolution doesn't matter. It just has to do with the gpu being able to handle the greater resolution. 4. treebearddarryl. • 2 yr. ago. Here, the picture clarity is much sharper than 1080p and also quite taxing on the system specs. Currently, it is a far more viable option compared to 4K gaming and you will get a much smoother experience as well. 2K gaming is cheaper and also you would get a better overall experience as well. Gaming at 30 FPS in 4K is not as good as 100 FPS in 2K.