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Shoshin Sam

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  1. Yeah, but after a certain height of the monitor, it doesn't make sense for me to have more space vertically. I need space horizontally. Maybe, a pin-up board or a marker board is some kind of analogy? But the digital kind.
  2. Thanks again, OC. Yeah I did see that before. Lol, none of them meet the PPI requirement including the CRG9 which works out to around 108PPI?
  3. Lol okay. I use quite a bit of AutoCAD, and Sketchup (and hence the ray-tracing cores for future). Like I said, no competitive gaming. You are right, Nvidia says RTX2080 can display 8K. But I will be using this for a lot of Adobe illustrator work too, and a few other graphic intensive works. Probably will have AutoCAD, Sketchup and Illustrator open at the same time.
  4. Thanks, Origami. Looks like might work, but interested to know if there's anything more, maybe from Samsung if anyone knows?
  5. Because that makes it "retina" at 2' distances for a 20/20 eyesight, and I can't stand to see anti-aliased text. I need a lot of screen real estate for my work involves a lot of referencing back and forth. I am also frigging used to Mac Pro displays and don't want to feel disappointed with my new PC build and monitor.
  6. I know 32:9 is out of bounds for the >143PPI clarity I seek. So, are there 21:9 monitors with that or better PPI? I realise I am asking for 4K's PPI in a 21:9 aspect ratio. But, is there something? I know I will be stuck with 60Hz, but I am not looking for competitive gaming. I still have to decide on my GPU between 2080 and 2080TI.
  7. Thanks, G27Racer! Maybe, someone will. Just to share with you, the reason for not want to tweak it later: I would like the wooden edges (at the opening) to be sanded well and sealer sprayed, with PU or polycoat finish on it, as will be rest of the case, with a brushed stainless steel trim at the edge.
  8. That's an option Mooshi, but that wouldn't tell me if the gap in the bottom would be visible. I am trying to get it as good as possible. G27Racer_188, I am furniture designer and outsource the prototyping. So then, I will have to depend on the external team to make this change happen. Therefore, I am trying to minimise changes, in case if anyone has some information on this. And, no, I don't have the mobo in hand. When I do, I would like to have the case ready too, to be installed, thereby reducing risk of damage during storage of the mobo during the fabrication/finishing of the case.
  9. I apologise if this has been already asked, but please bear with me, I am a newbie to PC case design. I am building a PC case in wood. The motherboard I am using will be the Asus x470 Rog Strix Gaming-F motherboard. It comes with a prefitted IO shied.I have searched to find the sizes of the IO shied cutout and most of them show the cutout to start from lower than the motherboard, like this: I realise this might be how it works for seperate IO shields. I also know the motherboard will fit into the standard cut-outs. But I find that this prefitted IO starts right at the level of the motherboard, and not below it. So, if I do a standard cut-out, will I find a gap in the bottom of 6.35mm? I mean, should I change the cut-out size for the motherboard? Anyone has worked with these preinstalled IO shields? I am attaching an image that shows the IO shield. Thanks!
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