Calling every good goy that bought a 24"+ monitor
>>58645747
I use a 70'' 1080p tv as second monitor.
>>58645747
do you know how moving your eyes works anon
>>58645852
>spending more to see less
I'd rather see everything immediately on a cheap small monitor
>>58645953
no you wont see everything immediately cos the monitor and resolution are smaller, so you physically have to scroll/move stuff instead of just looking at it
>>58645965
Everything in my central vision I will see immediately, or at least I'll see more detail in the image than I would on a larger screen
Resolution is not tied to screen size. You can buy a 7" 4K screen and a 70" 1080p screen, not that 4K is distinguishable from 1080p anyway (not until you get to 40"+).
I use a 42" LG IPS 60Hz UHD display (Microboard Korean brand). It's changed the way I work. It acts like a real desktop, where I can place my programs and docs and stuff around in it. I don't maximize windows on it, because it's pointless. Nothing scales to that size, so it doesn't matter. The physical size of the screen also means that I don't have to use shitty font scaling or anything either. It's amazing.
Try a 40" UHD display. It'll change the way you work forever.
>>58645747
I couldn't even read the text in that box when the image was full screen on my 13" 768p monitor that was about 1 foot away from my face
I would much rather use a 27" 4k monitor
>>58646017
>It acts like a real desktop, where I can place my programs and docs and stuff around in it
Ever heard of tabs?
At 42 inches, half the screen is outside even your semi-decent peripheral vision, assuming a standard viewing distance (sitting at desk).
>>58646041
I set my resolution to 1366x768 and reduced the image size a further 50%
The text was still legible and anyone can test this
Optimal screen size for typical viewing distance is 21-24", not 13"
This is roughly what you'd see on a 27" monitor
The distance between the pupils (red dots) is taken to be 64mm (male average)
The semi-transparent red circles are fovea central vision (5 degrees each eye)
The semi-transparent green circles are macula vision (18 degrees each eye)
Anything beyond macula vision is 2% or less the acuity of the *edge* of fovea central vision, and is therefore poo vision
Note: Circles are used for convenience, only the width and not length is accurate
>>58645747
Stare
nigger
anime