![1440p f1 2019 images 1440p f1 2019 images](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/MrbHHBk3R34/maxresdefault.jpg)
High dpi screens make images look a bit sharper (depending on your eyesight) but for me the most noticeable difference is text. With two monitors, even modern programs are often not "per-monitor aware", which means they get confused if the two monitors have different pixel density and may display slightly furry text on one or other monitor. Windows makes a fairly good job, but this sometimes leaves text slightly furry. However, most old programs (more than about 5 years old) and quite a few modern apps don't scale gracefully.
#1440p f1 2019 images windows 10
With a pixel density significantly higher than 96dpi then many people would prefer to scale up the display, and Windows 10 does this automatically (or you can choose your own scale factor). Windows and programs used to assume everything was around 96dpi, and scale text etc accordinly. Most modern cpus and graphics cards have enough power for 4K the issue is more pixel density, not number of pixels. I have a 4K 27 inch and a 1920x1200 24 inch on my desktop, and my laptop is a 15 inch 4k. The points in the article are interesting, but it's rather opinionated, and as you see many here don't agree.
![1440p f1 2019 images 1440p f1 2019 images](https://images.hdqwalls.com/download/2019-mclaren-senna-gtr-va-2560x1440.jpg)
Even when 8k monitors become ubiquitous Microsoft will have some excuse about why they can't scale the taskbar (OSX does it without any problems). The only disadvantage to 4k in Windows is that Microsoft can't get its act together to scale the taskbar which would take very little effort on their part. That's why your teeny phone screen has the resolution it has. That's why people like the Macbook Pro even though they have no clue why. The difference in resolutions is obvious and every non-geek who has sat in front of the monitors prefers the 4k for reasons well known to anyone who has ever sat nose to monitor distance from a higher resolution panel. I have an nvidia 970ti video card but I will soon be buying a super 2060 or 2060. I would not like to have made an unsuitable purchase for my favorite game.
#1440p f1 2019 images 1080p
But I always have a doubt: there is a lot of difference to play at 1080p and at 1440p. The 1080 technically has a wider gamut but when calibrated to the same dimmish value for color managed processing and printing the human eye loses that extra gamut even if one had good enough color vision-most probably don't-to see the difference in the first place. Hi I just bought a new monitor at 144 Hz (oc 180 Hz) at 1080p. I work in PS every day with a pair of identically calibrated monitors, one 4k and one 1080+ (less than 1440 but more than 1080). That article is a perfect example of not letting the facts get in the way of a good opinion.