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gregoryw3

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  • Posts

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male

System

  • CPU
    Intel Core i3-4360 @3.7GHz
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte Z97N-WIFI
  • RAM
    Crucial Ballistix Sport 16GB
  • GPU
    EVGA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti FTW GAMING
  • Case
    Cooler Master - HAF 912
  • Storage
    Samsung 850 EVO 250GB
  • PSU
    CS450M
  • Display(s)
    2x Asus vx238h
  • Cooling
    Stock Fan
  • Keyboard
    Razer DeathStalker Ultimate
  • Mouse
    Razer Mamba Chroma
  • Sound
    Sony ZSS3IP
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Education
  • PCPartPicker URL

gregoryw3's Achievements

  1. Thanks, I just got out of the shower and thought of doing that exact thing! Thanks so much, now I just need to buy new pc parts to use this new information.....
  2. Thanks this helped sort of. So now I/we now the viewport is 854x480 with the 1080p (1080x1920) video squished down to 854x480, so what would be the resolution that would get the same sharpness of the 1080p video shrunk down to 854x480 except not shrunk down?
  3. No, I mean if you were to stretch a 720p video across a 1080p monitor the quality would go down, so I'm asking what resolution would the video (or game) have to be in order to get the same quality of resolution from a 1080p video stretched. Another way to explain it would be, whats the resolution of a 1080p screen in relation to the screen size (youtube small view).
  4. So I was wondering what is the resolution of a 1080p video when played on the smaller view available on youtube. By that, I mean what resolution (4k?) would I need to get the same quality (ie video game) as a 1080p video played in the smallest viewing option. Edit: For instance, you are watching Linus' latest video in 1080p fullscreen on youtube, then you shrink it down to the smallest view mode. What fullscreen resolution do you need to get the same quality of a 1080p video in the smallest view mode on youtube?
  5. The title is what I'm asking. Just wondering. Sorry, new to this forum if this is not what you're supposed to do.
  6. Looks great for quick movies in small spaces with the added bonus of great image quality.
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