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Showing results for tags '1080p'.
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I'm new to this cable thingies, if i mess up some terminologies I'll apologize in advance xd. what happens if I use a 1080i hdmi cable (non high speed) on a 1080p video/display? stupid question: is it the cable/video/display that makes something 1080p/1080i? I bought a 15 meter hdmi cable to link my pc to my tv... I am not sure if it's a high speed cable... gonna use it to play games... worst case scenario it can only do 1080i? will I notice a difference in game between 1080i/1080p?
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Hey So I am a rainbow six siege player My Current Setup - i7-8700k | gtx1060 | 16gb ram | 144hz monitor gonna be playing on 1080p and may upgrade to 240hz monitor in future Main Question - planning to upgrade to 3080 will my CPU be a bottleneck? I am posting for the first time so sorry if I made any mistakes.
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My monitor just died today (Press F) after 5 years of using it. I'm looking to buy a new one, hopefully a 144hz 1080p monitor. Any recommendations? Budget is around $200. Thanks.
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Alrighty Guys, The Age Old Question. Playing Games At 1080p At 60hz, Which Is The Best Card To Buy To Just Destroy The FPS Counter? Is The RTX 2060 Too Much? Is The GTX 1660 Super Going To Be Enough? I Want It For Division 2. Also Keep In Mind, I Only Have A 300w Power Supply!
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Hey! Was looking to get your thoughts on how future proof the RTX 2070 SUPER will be for ray traced games specific to 1080p 60fps, as of right now, wondering about cyberpunk 2077. Control is one the most beautiful games I've played, and can run flawlessly on 1080p at 60fps with DLSS (only care about 60fps because I have a 60hz monitor.) What're your thoughts for cyberpunk 2077? And what about future rtx based games? Will the RTX 2070 super constantly deliver 60 fps at 1080p with max settings and rtx on? Would love to discuss.
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- futurepoof
- 1080p
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Hi guys, I built a rig last Winter (i5 8400, 5700XT, 16 Gigs RAM) and used my existing older 27" 1080p/60hz Samsung Curved Monitor. Right now I wanna do an upgrade, but I'm not sure which option to go. My workload is a mix of classic office work and Single Player Games (Witcher 3, Borderlands 3, etc.) 1. 27" 1440p/144hz: This sounds more future proof and also since I'm working from home sometimes, more space for office work. On the other side the higher resolution would mean I loose a lot of headroom from my GPU for future games (Cyberpunk, etc.) and my rig will get a lot louder compared to right now. 2. 27" 1080p/144hz: Right now the Sweepspot: I know a lot of people don't like this resolution to size combination, but I'm pretty used to it and it doesn't bother me so much. But the push for more FPS should be visible also in Single Player Games. 3. 24" 1080p/144hz: A little bit smaller but therefore a better resolution to size comparison (Since this is cheaper a dual setup would be possible). Every opinion is appreciated. Andy
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Hey everyone, I need a laptop for university and have chosen the Dell XPS 15 9500. However, I need help deciding between the FHD screen and the UHD screen. I'm a computer science student so naturally I will be using programs such as Python and Java. On the side however, I will be watching movies, youtube videos, and playing a few light games on the laptop. Any advice would be much appreciated!
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I have 500$ budget and need a new GPU to replace my GTX970 but i don't have enough money to go for a new pc included new monitor or just GPU+monitor, so need something to keep my rig going at least a year, is there any good GPU with that price ?
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Hi, So I bought legion y540 few months ago and I want to buy new monitor that I can use as a external monitor. I would like a 144hz output but don't really know if HDMI will be able to do that. Is there way I can achieve this? Do I need to buy a specific monitor to get it working? Thanks for helping!
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- legion y540
- monitor
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Like the title says, I wanted to see if I could build a PC for $200 that would run Shadow of the Tomb Raider at 1080p resolution. TL:DR; my upgraded Optiplex 390 runs the benchmark (on low settings of course) at an average of 42FPS with a floor of 33FPS. Success!!! Parts List and Prices Base PC: Dell Optiplex 390 Mini Tower - $52.50 on eBay CPU: Xeon E3-1225 at 3.1GHz (this is the gen 1 LGA1155 version) - $19 on eBay Motherboard: Dell M5dcd - included with base PC Case: Dell Optiplex 390 - included with base PC CPU Cooler: Stock Intel cooler - included with base PC Thermal Paste: If you don't have any lying around, just use mustard, lol - free RAM: 8GB DDR3 1333MHz - one stick included, $10.50 for the second stick Graphics Card: Radeon HD 7870 - $47.50 SSD: NEW Silicon Power 256GB SP256GBSS3A55S25 - $28.50 SSD 2.5" to 3.5" Adapter and Dell Hard Drive Caddy - $7.50 Hard Drive: 500GB 7200 RPM - included with base PC Power Supply: Antec Earthwatts EA500 80+ PSU - $35 Other fans, cables, etc: whatever came in the base PC Windows 10 Pro License - included with base PC (upgrade from Windows 7) Total: $200.50 When procuring parts, I would check Craigslist (or local equivalent) first for deals, especially on the base PC. I had to buy all of my parts, except the new SSD, on eBay, which took quite a bit of digging. Fortunately, my labor is not included in the budget! Build Log For the base system, any mini tower with an LGA1155 socket will probably work. We only really care about the case, motherboard, OS license, and at least one 4GB 1333MHz RAM stick. A hard drive is a nice to have. I used the stock case, motherboard, and CPU cooler. I had to settle for a board that only had two RAM slots, officially capped at 2x4GB of RAM (though the internet tells me that I could probably upgrade to 2x8GB). None of these parts are great, but they're cheap and they got the job done. Xeon E3-1225 processors are cheap four core, 3+GHz processors that are sufficient to avoid bottlenecking the graphics card. While Xeon processors are usually not listed as compatible for the PCs you'll find for $50, theoretically they should work in almost any 1155 motherboard. An i5-2400 costs a little more for the same performance and (almost) guaranteed compatibility. Prior generation i5-760 processors are cheaper but noticeably slower, and prior generation i7s are more expensive and slower. Newer generation CPUs of any flavor are significantly more expensive. Note that I don't like AMD CPUs from this era and did not seriously consider them - let me know if I screwed up! RAM selection is unremarkable, just get 8GB of 1333MHz and try to match your sticks. For the graphics card, I was able to find a Radeon HD 7870 for $47.50. If you prefer team green, GeForce GTX 760s offer slightly better performance for about the same price. You may need to dig a bit for a deal. You'll need an SSD. I spent a few extra bucks for a new 256GB drive, but you can save $5-$10 here with a lower capacity or used drive. I'm picky about mounting so I purchased a 2.5" to 3.5" adapter and one of Dell's special mounting sleeves to mount the SSD properly. The PC came with a 500GB 7200 RPM hard drive which I wiped and converted to extra storage. Finding the power supply was probably the trickiest part of the build (honorable mention to the GPU). I ended up with an Antec Earthwatts EA500 PSU. JonnyGuru liked it back in 2010, so it probably won't blow up the rig, and it had the two six pin GPU connectors I needed, so no adapters required. eBay usually has a couple of old, lower-tier-but-non-explosive 500w power supplies available at around $35. I included Windows 10 in the list above as you should be able to find a PC with a Windows 7 Professional license (possibly already upgraded to Windows 10). It's nice to have an activated copy of Windows 10, especially if you got it for free! All that remained was assembly, a Windows 10 installation, and unsupported BIOS update, and a lot of nail biting while the Shadow of the Tomb Raider benchmark ran. Remarkably, the rig cleared the 30FPS hurdle and averaged 42FPS, as you can see in the screenshot. Shadow of the Tomb Raider actually doesn't look all that bad on low settings. Also, the rig runs Fortnite on high settings at about 45 FPS and chews through CS:GO at 100+ FPS, so it can game (; Hope y'all enjoyed, pgpcs
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- shadow of the tomb raider
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Budget: $300/ ₹30000 AMD RYZEN 5 1600 Amd Radeon Rx 550 (4gb variant) Asus ex a320m gaming motherboard Gigabyte pb500 Barracuda 7200rpm 1tb Chiptronex mx2 Corsair vengeance lpx 3000mhz 8gb One more question... That all the a320m motherboard have highest ram speed of 2600mhz but I am adding a 3000mhz ram.. Will it work?.. Oh! One more thing I am way out of budget and I can't buy a b450 motherboard...
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Im going to build a PC. Specs: Ryzen 7 3700x 1660 super 16GB Cosair vengeance 3600MHZ RAM SSD+7200rpm baracuda drive No water cooling -From a build like this, what is the max FPS I can expect from a late AAA title like the latest CODModern Warfare at ultra 1080p?
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- 1660super
- ryzen73700x motherboard
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Firstly, I wasn't sure wether to post this in the Monitors section or the GPU one as it doesn't fit well in either. Sorry if it is offtopic. I am planning on purchasing a LG 27GL850-B to upgrade my cheap 1080p monitor. Now, I was thinking of using the old one as a second monitor but I'm not sure if my GTX 1060 3GB is going to handle driving a 1440p monitor and a 1080p one at the same time. So a GPU upgrade might have to happen sooner that expected. My plan right now is to get the monitor in the coming weeks and run single monitor (if dual is too much) until Black Friday, then get either a new GPU or if prices are still high get a used one. As for GPUs, I'm looking at either a 1070 Super or maybe a used 1080Ti, but the 3000 series are coming out soon as well, so I might wait for them depending on prices. I would be happy with any suggestions, generally don't want to spend more that £550. My question is, how big is the performance hit from having a second monitor and do you think my 1060 is going to be able to drive them, even for a short while? I guess a follow up would be - Are there any technical complications from running two monitors of different resolution?
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- gtx 10603gb
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Budget (including currency): Country: USA Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: Playing RB6 Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): I want 144hz & 1080p, 1 to 5 ms response. I chose this monitor but if there's another at a lower price & in stock I'll gladly try to snag it. Also, an affordable keyboard that works well for FPS gaming. Ill mostly be playing RB6. The most important elements to the build that id like is to hit 144hz at the cheapest price possible. This is my existing list: PCPartPicker Part List Type Item Price CPU AMD Ryzen 3 3200G 3.6 GHz Quad-Core Processor $99.99 @ B&H CPU Cooler be quiet! Pure Rock Slim 35.14 CFM CPU Cooler $35.29 @ Amazon Motherboard MSI B450M PRO-VDH MAX Micro ATX AM4 Motherboard $84.99 @ Newegg Memory Crucial Ballistix Sport LT 8 GB (1 x 8 GB) DDR4-3000 CL15 Memory $39.34 @ Amazon Storage ADATA Ultimate SU800 256 GB 2.5" Solid State Drive $38.99 @ Amazon Video Card EVGA GeForce GTX 1650 SUPER 4 GB SC ULTRA GAMING Video Card $189.99 @ Newegg Case Phanteks Eclipse P300A Mesh ATX Mid Tower Case $59.99 @ Amazon Power Supply EVGA BR 500 W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply $72.48 @ Amazon Monitor Acer XF240H 24.0" 1920x1080 144 Hz Monitor $219.99 @ Adorama Prices include shipping, taxes, rebates, and discounts Total $841.05 Generated by PCPartPicker 2020-08-24 09:38 EDT-0400
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After having run 1080p60hz for a couple years now, i want to go a step higher in terms of hz. However, my system (3600x + 1660Super) is not quite ready for 1440p144hz. A lot of people told me not to buy a 27inch 1080p, so I ended up looking for a 1080p144hz monitor at 24". However this was more difficult than i thought, with most monitors that I found having mixed reviews. The market for for 1080p144hz wasnt as big as i thought it would be, especially at 24". What monitor would you guys recommend?
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Hello guys, im looking for an IPS monitor with a somehow high refresh rate and 1080p. Any recommendations? im looking for a high refresh rate for fluidity , IPS panels may have higher response times but doesn’t matter since won’t play competitive .i like an IPS because of how TN displays look, Not a fan of this type of panel. the budget is around 400€ thanks in advance
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Hey, what are the best options for the Specs in the title. Dont really have a budget, but prefferably nothing over 400€/$
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So since i have finally upgraded my computer i am looking to upgrade my monitor considering I'm playing on a old 1080 60hz monitor atm. My budget as mentioned is anywhere from 400-600$ USD, i mostly play MMO's while the occasional shooter COD, and Apex. i am looking maybe to play more competitive later on so just kind of want to see wat ppl suggest for 1080p monitors. However as i mentioned i most play MMOS so i was looking at 1440ps monitor and reviewed the rtings website as well as videos and reviews from other sources and it seem like Asus Tuff is the way to go or the new Asus monitors. Again just trying to see people suggestions or personal experience if you are using set monitors.
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I need help looking for monitors, there are so many options to choose I don't know what should I pick, so I figured I'd ask here to try to narrow the options. I am looking for two 1080p 144hz monitor. A bonus would it having G-Sync and low millisecond respond time. I am also planning them to be in a dual monitor setup and putting them on a monitor mount. Thanks!
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Hello folks, Currently I have a C24G1, but have it some issues with the panel (dead pixels, yellow line at middle and one half with yellow filter) and I can have an all rebate... So, I'm looking for a nice monitor for FPS (WZ, BT, CS:GO). I'm a little competitive. In my country I can get XG2405, Optix G241, VP249CQR, VG240YP, XG2402, VG249QM, XL2411P. I want a nice panel with less possible ghosting and the best response time that I can gent of the list monitor. Why don't buy in other country? To keep the warranty, send the monitor will cost at least the half of the monitor with shipping, excluding taxes... I don't care the panel tipe (TN, VA, IPS), only want the best possible for shooters that I can get (please only from the list)... Thanks guys!
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Link I found this monitor on canada computer and it was on a big sale. (Price in CAD) I haven't found a lot of reviews on it wanted to get some of your opinions. Thanks in advance! Anthony
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I just got the 1650 Super and I need a new monitor, I was wondering if the 1650 super can support 1440p, or if I should just stick to 1080p. Thanks.
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Witch one is better, a 24" 1080p vs a 27" 1440p. I really need a new monitor and I am debating getting a 24" 1080p or a 27" 1440p. Can someone please tell me witch one I should get. Thanks.
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Hi, looking for a 24-25 inch 1080p, 240hz monitor. Will be used for gaming, watching movies etc. It will sit next to my LG 27gl850 if that matters. Since my current monitor has a IPS panel, I want my new monitor to also have that. I believe that most of these monitors uses the same panel, but I would like to ask the community before making a purchase. I will be using the stock stand, so I would want to avoid a monitor with a bad stand. I most likely won't be using it vertically, but it should go up and down, and tilt back and forth. Standard features I guess. The monitors I'm looking at is: Asus TUF Gaming VG259QM ($439.46) Dell Alienware AW2521HF ($517.79) Acer Predator XB253QGX ($530.15) MSI Optix MAG251RX ($535.95) Alienware AW2521HFL ($540.14) Acer Nitro XV253QX ($607.62) They are all pretty much around the same price so I could go with either. I have a Nvidia RTX 2070 super and I believe all of them support G-sync compatible.
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Budget (including currency): 350€ Country: Germany Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: 1080p gaming, mostly For Honor and Dark Souls 3, looking for the highest FPS possible on this budget. Preferably a future proof GPU Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): I would like to upgrade my GPU, upgrading from a GTX 1050 Ti. My use cases are listed above. My current PC has the following specifications: CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 2600 RAM: Corsair Vengeance Pro 2x8GB Current GPU: Gainward GTX 1050 Ti PSU: Thermaltake 500W OS Drive: WD M.2 SSD 128GB (SATA) Additional Drives: 2TB Seagate Firecuda, 1TB Samsung 870 EVO Any advice would be appreciated.