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1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p
1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p













1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p
  1. #1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p 720p#
  2. #1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p windows 8#
  3. #1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p windows#

If we are increasing the resolution then our GPU and CPU should. We increase the screen resolution or we decrees the screen resolution. We changes the resolution in the monitor. The good example of resolution is monitor. I'm not sure what all that would mean but I suspect again it would be interesting to do a compare of the Display Devices for the two cases for more clues. Example of some popular resolutions are 1024 x 768, 1680 x 1050, 1920 x 1080, 2560 x 1440, 3840 x 21 x 1440 etc. OMG I just had a look at how much detail DxDiag.txt provides.

#1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p windows#

Take laptop home and then connect to my home monitor with the VGA cable and windows detects a 1366x768 resolution on this HD monitor. 1680x1050 doesn't really have an easy nickname (unless you count 'WSXGA+'). There isn't a nickname for every resolution, so some might not have any.

#1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p 720p#

Connect VGA cable at the office to a HD monitor, successfully get 1920x1080 resolution on my external monitor. 720p is a nickname for 1280x720, 1080p is a nickname for 1920x1080. The screen on the default monitor is 1366x768.

#1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p windows 8#

Then, since you have two different cases it may also be necessary to capture those diagnostics for each, especially the dxdiag ones. Purchased new Sony Laptop with Windows 8 on it. What all do you have in there? You could do a Select all and Copy (Ctrl-a, Ctrl-c) to capture that display.Īnother one is dxdiag.exe That may be even more relevant to your question because it shows specifications about the resources being used for each monitor (in tabs Display1 and Display2). Im using OBS because Bandicam for some reason crashes when I choose H264 or X264, so I wouldn need to record in XVid but I think it's not worth it in 2015 when 264 makes videos look better and weight less as far as I know (even if Youtube re-compresses it i've seen some tests and 264 looked better). Also in System Information (msinfo32.exe). Hi, so say I want to record League of Leguends gameplay at 1080p and save locally. The only difference is that its a 16:10 ratio instead of 16:p. In fact, I just thought of another source of details which may help. '1080p gaming' is not a real-world concept. Which at least would help rule out some suggestions about using tools from AMD and nVidia (assuming that that particular document showed the same specifications as one for yours would.) Here's what we have so far for a search by BING: One way to find it is using System Information System Summary (opening page of msinfo32.exe). What are its specifications? If you need help finding and interpreting them you need to give us your System SKU. I'm really interested to get first hand opinion from people who are/were used to 1080p gaming then switch to 1440p.

1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p

What matters is your "Sony Laptop"'s video system.















1680 x 1050 is this 1080p or 720p