Why I RETURNED my 4k Monitor // MacOS Scaling Explained!

I recently bought a super nice 4K monitor...and then returned it for the lower resolution 1440p version, why?
I also take a few minutes too explain MacOS scaling on external monitors!
Follow Up Video! - • Why I RETURNED my 4K M...
Article about MacOS Scaling
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bjango.com/articles/macextern...
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Music from Epidemic Sound
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4K Monitor- amzn.to/3GuAvAT
1440p Monitor- amzn.to/3wUoGiR
(All links below are Affiliate Links, so I do get kickback when these are used, but you still get the same price!)
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My Desk Setup!
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Macbook Pro M1 13” - amzn.to/3NI44kS
Asus ProArt 278cv 1440p - amzn.to/3M7rQ8M
(4K Model) Asus ProArt 279cv - amzn.to/3awytnS
Logitech Master 3s - amzn.to/3wZsAZ6
Logitech POP Keys Mechanical Keyboard - amzn.to/3wVdVhv
Monitor Arm - amzn.to/3MZAsiM
Caldigit Thunderbolt Hub - amzn.to/3a4vkve
Elgato Stream Deck - amzn.to/3z3FiHB
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My Video Gear!
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Sony A7III - amzn.to/3wWHDmo
Sony 20mm 1.8 - amzn.to/3x1qSGN
Sony 90mm 2.8 - amzn.to/3NI5QCn
Peak Design CF Tripod - amzn.to/3a7szsY
Atomos Shinobi 4K Monitor - amzn.to/3wYYvsz
Godox TL60 RGB Light - amzn.to/3a6l6KO
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My Audio Gear!
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Rode Podmic - amzn.to/3N3caV4
(Alternative Higher Quality Mic) Shure SM7B - amzn.to/3N3cuDg
Scarlett Solo Interface - amzn.to/3GydDQX
Cloudlifter CL-1 - amzn.to/3x1lgwg
Tonor Boom Arm - amzn.to/3NJ8Xdn
(Higher Quality Boom Arm) Rode PSA1+ - amzn.to/38zde4c
Edifier MR4 4” Studio Monitors - amzn.to/3Guw60A
Akai MPK Mini 3 Midi Keyboard - amzn.to/3M183ra
Chapters
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Intro 00:00
How I got the 4K monitor 00:50
Mac Scaling Deep Dive 02:10
Destroying my RAM 06:00
Deciding to DOWNGRADE 07:30
Why APPLE uses the resolutions that they do 10:30
Conclusion 11:40
Outro 13:53

Пікірлер: 2 300

  • @ryejack
    @ryejack Жыл бұрын

    Wow, I wish more youtubers would do videos breaking down issues like this in such a good way. That made perfect sense to me and was an issue I didn't even know to look out for until now. Thanks!

  • @keep1hunnid
    @keep1hunnid8 ай бұрын

    Bro this video is gold. I have been looking into monitors trying to decide what ppi to get and none of the resources gave a proper reasoning for their suggestions except your video. Thank you

  • @boredandagitated
    @boredandagitated Жыл бұрын

    I knew how retina worked but I never thought about the gpu rendering issue you talked about. A really small 4K screen like 24” would prolly be awesome. But I love my 27” 1440p so my next upgrade will be for a 5k monitor so I can go retina resolutions on my desktop. That crisp text is my favorite thing on the MacBook screens

  • @jack_2612

    @jack_2612

    Жыл бұрын

    I bought a 24" Lg Ultrafine 4K and at 1440p scaling it's awesome and not heavy on the gpu at all. I think 5K is definitely on the expensive side still, and not worth it for non-pro users. You should consider a 4K instead and save a few bucks.

  • @MulliganAl
    @MulliganAl Жыл бұрын

    Hunter, this is some really excellent information, thanks for diving in and breaking it down. I’ve been looking at the BenQ SW270C 2K monitor for photographers and will be using it with a Mac Mini but I thought I’d be missing something by not going with a 4K monitor. I do mostly photo editing but want to start doing some video and thought it would be a negative but it looks like I should be fine with both. Thanks again and man, I can’t believe no one else has hit the nail on the head on this topic in all this time the way you have.

  • @matthewchiang
    @matthewchiang2 жыл бұрын

    Jeeezus this was so helpful! I'm trying to find the right monitor for my personal m1 air and intel mbp for work, and the scaling discrepancy mixed in with other factors that go into choosing a monitor were driving me crazy! Thanks Hunter!

  • @terryward1422
    @terryward1422 Жыл бұрын

    You video adresses exactly the dilemma I was facing. I need a 27" external monitor for my MacBook Air. I had a 1080p Samsung monitor but the scaling drove me nuts. I was going to get a 27" LG monitor as an upgrade but I was told the scaling would still be a problem. The sales associate suggested a 1440 monitor so I started researching and this is what brought me to your article. You have done an awesome job covering the details. In the future you might was to make a long form video on this exact subject aimed at new content creators and do a deep dive so that it can be used as a reference on the subject. Well done...

  • @kevin_mitchell

    @kevin_mitchell

    5 ай бұрын

    I could be wrong, but from my understanding a 5K 27" would scale correctly as opposed to a 4K 27"

  • @RonaldKasper

    @RonaldKasper

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kevin_mitchellI think you’re right. That’s why the Apple Studio Display has 5K and 27 inches.

  • @coldisopropyl

    @coldisopropyl

    2 ай бұрын

    that sales associate was knowledgeable

  • @socke4853

    @socke4853

    2 ай бұрын

    Which monitor you got now

  • @anthonytorrey4019
    @anthonytorrey40196 ай бұрын

    I really appreciate the deep dive, you explained a lot to me,. Thanks a lot for this review. It was exactly what I needed to understand the scaling. I was considering a 32'" 4K monitor. But now that you explained the scaling. I'll just keep using my 27" monitor. Thank you Hunter

  • @user-xc2pd7cs2v
    @user-xc2pd7cs2v2 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for your video! The explanation I was looking for and decisive for my final choice for my new monitor.

  • @mmeiselph7234
    @mmeiselph72342 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this. Great vid, wish I had seen this before today, it would have made me more comfortable about what I decided to do when I replaced my i7 iMac (not retina) with a Mac Studio (base model). I was not gonna pay $1600 for the Studio display and was looking at 4k monitors. Decided to buy a used Thunderbolt display. Works great.

  • @Vaaalyt
    @Vaaalyt Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so very much for this, KZread suggested this to me and now I'm a lifelong subscriber. I did not know how to exactly approach this to understand what to search for during my quest to find what sort of cheaper alternative correctly scaled monitor I can use to substitute for the studio display so I was at a complete lost until I found your amazing content. No one touched this subject properly aside from just briefly mentioning 4k scaling being weird/ an issue in all of these monitor videos for the studio display.

  • @kevinhoober1863
    @kevinhoober1863 Жыл бұрын

    Dude, great video. Came here after watching a Tech Notice video on the Mac Studio. Thanks for the succinct explanation!

  • @hanuman108
    @hanuman108 Жыл бұрын

    This helped me so much, thanks. I had been looking at 4K's for my new MB Pro M1 Pro. Great energy, Hunter.

  • @british31
    @british312 жыл бұрын

    @Hunter King BTW, if you option click on "scaled" you will get resolution by the numbers AND you get a "Show all resolutions" button that will tell you which resolutions are scaled or processor intensive. Pretty much answered some of the questions you had about what resolution works best. Agreed about most of the information you presented tho.

  • @RomboutVersluijs

    @RomboutVersluijs

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hahah commented the same thing. It's hidden trick. Not sure why they just show all of it by default

  • @ricarmig

    @ricarmig

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a macos (Mac Mini M1) attached to a 4K monitor and a windows 11 laptop. Macos (or iPadOS for that matter) connected to a non-Apple monitor is to laugh at. W11 is MUCH better in almost everything but on battery / code optimization (and the battery improvements don't interest me as I have no MacBook).

  • @alexandrevery

    @alexandrevery

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ricarmig Windows (7 to 11) uses the monitor at its original resolution (eg ... 3840x2160 for a 4K panel) and then scale the UI. MacOs imposes a high level of quality (220dpi) to smooth the UI at @2x ... Which is better ? it depends ONLY on your level of requirement. If one is satisfied with little, Windows is better. If you have a minimum quality requirement, MacOS is better. That's all

  • @johnnyc.31

    @johnnyc.31

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ricarmig Windows doesn’t give you the high quality option at all, which isn’t better. Mac OS doesn’t force you to use scaled resolutions (which look amazing on HiDPI displays). The beginning of this video says that you can use full 4K res, but UI elements appear tiny. In that case, system & app settings can be adjusted to scale-up many interfaces.

  • @danieljr974
    @danieljr97411 ай бұрын

    I currently have a PA278QV ProArt model and I just purchases a Mac Studio. I was about to purchase a 4K monitor. I am very grateful for your video, the time you put into researching, and the clear explanation. You saved me a good amount of money, thank you! Subscribed! Also have you heard of their new version PA278CGV? It's basically the same thing but with 95% DCI-P3 and 144Hz variable refresh rate! I might get one of those.

  • @Ian-gf8id
    @Ian-gf8id Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video and explanation of the scaling considerations, especially the 'good zone' chart. Many thanks.

  • @hyugaItaWR
    @hyugaItaWR6 ай бұрын

    I have to say thank you. You answered a huge doubt that I couldn't understand. Really thank you, i work with video, ledwall, and this finally change a lot of things

  • @ambulanceartist5
    @ambulanceartist52 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video, great explanation. Thanks for doing the leg work for us. Ps. Love the la dispute tattoo

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks man! glad I could help! also it makes me happy when someone notices that tattoo so thanks for that as well 😂

  • @JakeBibler
    @JakeBibler Жыл бұрын

    Dude, this was exactly what I was looking for… I have the same MBP and I’m trying to decide which monitor to purchase as a replacement for my old dual 23” desktop setup. You just saved me $100 and probably a headache. Thanks!

  • @hassanedits777

    @hassanedits777

    3 ай бұрын

    did you buy one? I am also looking for a 4k monitor and after seeing this I am afraid to buy one. what options do we have then?

  • @SueFerreira75
    @SueFerreira7511 ай бұрын

    Thank you - great explanation. I was inclining to the 27" 2K and you have helped confirm this decision.

  • @gabrielsurraco2668
    @gabrielsurraco2668 Жыл бұрын

    For those who have issues with the resolution (working at 30 Hz) after connecting a macbook to it, to be able to work at 60 Hz, you will need to change the mode in System -> PC/AV Mode (monitor settings). Also change the resolution settings in the Macbook (display settings - hold option key and click over scaled, then select 60Hz). My monitor is a Samsung odyssey G7 28 4k.

  • @Moesuito

    @Moesuito

    Жыл бұрын

    28' at 4K is good? I liked the Samsung UR550 monitor but MacOS scaling is very bad

  • @gabrielsurraco2668

    @gabrielsurraco2668

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Moesuito 28' for macs are shit. No problems on windows though

  • @woutervanteerling

    @woutervanteerling

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gabrielsurraco2668 i swear hahahaha

  • @abhisheka3

    @abhisheka3

    Жыл бұрын

    Sorry, what do we need to select in monitor settings- PC or AV mode? I have a Samsung 1080p monitor and my MacBook Pro 16 inch (intel touch bar version) is unable to detect the monitor

  • @gabrielsurraco2668

    @gabrielsurraco2668

    Жыл бұрын

    @@abhisheka3 Find a program called SwitchResX, it will find the right resolution for you.

  • @johnnyc.31
    @johnnyc.31 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I will add that one could use a 4K monitor at default res, and use UI settings to enlarge small elements. For example, increase browser scaling, and adjust Finder for larger text and icons. All important content (like image & video editing viewers) should still map properly to the screen, but yes, things will be much smaller in 4K than on 1440p. The main benefit of 4K is that 4K content in full screen will be perfect pixel representation - perhaps important for video editors (to see issues like moire). This is why edit suites have client & reference output monitors calibrated to verify content playback, so the working interface is less crucial and can be whatever the artist prefers. It all depends on your needs and setup.

  • @valdir7426

    @valdir7426

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah that's what I do. It's just a problem for text editors and mails where I have to use larger fonts. having real estate is priceless.

  • @spectre3492

    @spectre3492

    Жыл бұрын

    windows has had display scaling for ages that does this way better, i dont understand for the life of me why apple can't get this right. you shouldn't have to dick around with all of these options to get the interface to scale properly so you can see it comfortably.

  • @Taylor_King

    @Taylor_King

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spectre3492 its fucking insane hey... I got an older macbook pro off a mate to fuck around with. And I was softening a lot to the idea of migrating from windows to mac (just for music production, everything else still on windows... probably). Anyway... the cunt can't scale?! I have a 27" 1440p monitor that looks amazing using Windows; complete dog shit on macOS. If I had actually paid good money for this, and I get it home and am at a roadblock like this first up... How the fuck is it 2022 and we can't just set shit to 125% scaling without fucking around for 3 hours?! It's amazing that no one seems to really bring that up when talking about macs... I guess cause they're mainly using self contained units (iMac, Macbook), but mac mini users are being completely shafted. It is baffling

  • @TheDougSpot

    @TheDougSpot

    Жыл бұрын

    @@spectre3492 You don’t. What he did is basically just bought a new car because his old one ran out of gas🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @laptopleon6386

    @laptopleon6386

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@spectre3492 I'm sorry, but if you would've actually used macOS yourself, you wouldn't say this. Windows 10 still had a weird mix of styles and sizes, even in their jungle of preference panes. Mac is way more consistent in this and has been for decades. I don't understand this guy's problem either. 4K is huge compared to 2K. If you don't like that or can't get used to it, by all means, use a lower resolution monitor. Just don't pretend it is not nice to have. It's just a personal preference. I've been using a 4K monitor for years and I will never go back.

  • @ZabaduTube
    @ZabaduTube Жыл бұрын

    Good vid- thanks for the details! Very educational - I've been falling down the 4K rabbit hole coming from an LG 5K Ultrafine.

  • @Razumasu
    @Razumasu Жыл бұрын

    Perfect video! I've been struggling with this for a long time. Thanks for clearing it up!

  • @rode.retouch
    @rode.retouch2 жыл бұрын

    Completely agree with you. I recently got a Benq SW240 for my MacBook Pro and it’s only 1920x1200 which is perfect for me to use in photoshop, camera raw and affinity designer. Yes, there are some pixels if I’m really peeking but I work with color and not pixels :)

  • @michaeldangelomusic
    @michaeldangelomusic Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video. I had been running an LG 4K 27" monitor with my MacBook Pro for about 2 years and while I didn't have performance issues, I had significant overheating issues. Simple tasks like watching KZread videos or word processing would kick the fans on full speed. Your explanation of how MacOS handles display scaling is spot on and I finally figured out the issue to be running in scaled mode and the computer essentially sending out a 5K/6K signal and downscaling to 4K, significantly taxing the GPU on my machine. I wound up purchasing the same ASUS ProArt 27" 1440p monitor you talk about here and I'm happy to say there are absolutely no performance/overheating issues and the display looks great. I will miss the retina aspect, but I'd rather take that than dealing with a hot, slow computer. Thanks again, Hunter!

  • @reconnaisance

    @reconnaisance

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh no, I’ll probably cancel my LG 4k purchase! Glad to have read this.

  • @ricanyp

    @ricanyp

    11 ай бұрын

    I was wondering if should get the LG 27UN880 4K display glad to have found this video and comment. I would considering getting ProArt or Lenovo's 2K QHD 27" with 70hz

  • @JFostermusic

    @JFostermusic

    2 ай бұрын

    Hi! I got the same asus 1440p model and I’m having issues with it. Everything looks blurry, any tips? I have a Mac mini m2.

  • @richarddwjensen
    @richarddwjensen Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much!!! So hard to find this info elsewhere

  • @duarteestelita7257
    @duarteestelita7257 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this man ;) You did a good job explaining things . I'll check the link/article up now , as well. Cheers from Portugal

  • @ieattunaeveryday
    @ieattunaeveryday Жыл бұрын

    Hey, Hunter. Thanks for this very in-depth video! I have a small Macbook Air M1. I'm a writer, so I need text to show up as clearly as possible--as I'm constantly staring at text. I've read some comments that text actually shows up better on 4k displays... What was your experience with how the text showed up on 4k vs 1440p displays? Thanks!

  • @21dazzer

    @21dazzer

    Жыл бұрын

    Categorically, on a Mac, text is not sharp on a 4K. 1440p it is, but you have to contend with seeing the pixels or 5K - they are your only 2 flawless options, or a MacBook screen.

  • @josephholmes5061
    @josephholmes5061 Жыл бұрын

    Very well done. Thorough and correct coverage of most of the issues. The one that you hadn't noticed yet is that when the scaling option chosen in the Displays system pref is neither the screen's native ppi (3840 wide) or 50% of that (1920), macOS scales Photoshop bitmaps using bilinear interpolation, causing all visible pixels to be degraded and hiding their true character. This messes with the process of working out optimal sharpening. What we need for that is to have all bitmap user images to be shown as one image pixel per screen pixel when we're zoomed to "100%". And sadly, in macOS, that's only possible when we're using one of those scalings: native or half native. So it doesn't mean that screens outside of the two green zones in the good reference you cited can't work, but if a screen is outside of the green zones, then you'll be forced to choose a scaling that either makes everything much too big (e.g. ~40% too big) or much too small (~30% too small), but those percentages vary with the choice of 27" 4K or 32" 4K. One might be forced to constantly flip back and forth between scalings, and/or mess with lots of settings for font sizes and so on, but this is a major shortcoming of macOS which has been revealed by the industry trend toward 140 and 164 ppi screens, which are otherwise quite nice. Since there are only 2 5K screens at 27" in the world and only the one 6K 32" screen, we're left with way too few choices. All three of those screens have significant shortcomings but the 27" Studio Display's may be the least bothersome. Perhaps it's worst feature is that it cannot be connected to any machine except a very new one, and among Macs it requires both a new Mac and one of the latest OS's. It's color gamut is a solid, full P3 gamut, its two screen surface options are each good-looking, and it has high max brightness, and so on. This business of monitor shopping has become quite the nightmare of complexity, if you're after the best for each feature.

  • @michalwiktorow2188

    @michalwiktorow2188

    Жыл бұрын

    That is EXACTLY the issue and feature - because - only in 'native' and 'half-native' resolutions - macOS is able to display 'parts of UI' in full resolution when UI is 2x2 px. Like ... yes ... 5120x2880 is ..... 2560x1440 for UI elements, but for 'Preview window' i can be - AT THE same time - displayed as 1x1px! In other words you can have Preview in full usable pixels 'in position where the preview window is' - however the gui parts will be rendered 2x2px.

  • @marcocaramori4662
    @marcocaramori4662 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot for this review. It was exactly what I needed to understand. Was not sure if I needed 4k or 2k and actually wanted more space and better pixel density compared to full hd.

  • @marcoshazzini
    @marcoshazzini Жыл бұрын

    The information I was looking for. Thanks!!!

  • @fmarinosfromafar9512
    @fmarinosfromafar95122 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, Marc Edwards at Bjango is basically the go-to guy for macOS scaling and graphic design. Good choice on the monitor! I'm using the old Thunderbolt Display which is 1440p, it's still a great monitor and 1440p on 27" is perfect.

  • @juurstudio
    @juurstudio Жыл бұрын

    I’m surprised this is not discussed more. The other problem with scaled resolutions is that you will lose some sharpness. And as of sharpness if you sharpen your images on a high density 4k monitor it will be over sharpened on a regular low ppi monitor, which many people are still using. So with retina MacBooks 1440p monitor is really the best option for any design or photography work, because then you can check your work both on high and low pixel density monitors.

  • @ko-Daegu

    @ko-Daegu

    11 ай бұрын

    It’s discussed heavily if you follow channels that’s more dev centric but I agree mainstream reviewers should talk about these shady practices but they don’t care cuz they review best products including apple top of the line so they don’t spend enough time worrying about this

  • @thailandertravel

    @thailandertravel

    9 ай бұрын

    My 24” 1080p monitor with Mac Mini 2018 hurts my eyes to use very disorienting

  • @ZhuJo99

    @ZhuJo99

    6 ай бұрын

    Nobody is going to control every pixel on your images. And no web developer would care about if final result on Web will be few pixels off. Because whole idea of "pixel perfect responsive design" is huge bullshit by principle.

  • @anupmunir6359
    @anupmunir6359 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video, you have explained it so nicely. I experienced this issue but couldn't figure out what might be the problem. Thank you so much!

  • @JohnnyTsunami_
    @JohnnyTsunami_ Жыл бұрын

    Cleared all my confusions! Bless up King!

  • @J1ss3ncy
    @J1ss3ncy2 жыл бұрын

    I had the same issue with a 4k 27" Dell Ultrasharp. The text was way too small for my eyes (I'm 50yo), or a bit blurry whenever I changed the pixel density to 1440p, instead of macOS' default 1080p 4:1 pixel downscale. I replaced it with the U3223QE, it's 32" big brother. This one looks great. Only menus text stays small, since you cannot change their font size. But it's doable for all other apps: from the Finder sidebar (via cmd ,) to web browsers (cmd + or cmd - in Safari or Chrome) and of course all types of word processors. In more basic Mac native apps like Stickies, Reminder, Notes or TextEdit, you can use cmd t to summon macOS' Text Menu and adjust the font size and weight. And I don't know about your Asus ProArt, but all current Ultrasharp monitors feature an auto KVM switch, 60 or 90W recharge for your laptop when connected via USB-C, and additional ports: not only USB but also Ethernet and an audio jack (but your Mac one is surely better). No more need for an expensive Call Digit hub! I must sound like a Dell salesman, but I'm not. I just purchased their first 1440p monitor, in 2012, and it still works.

  • @BlueTenorSax
    @BlueTenorSax2 жыл бұрын

    i went the opposite of what you did. After I got MacBook Pro M1 14, I realized PA278QV does not allow Hidpi, therefore fonts look so small in native 1440 resolution. I bought PA279CV and use the "Larger text" and everything looks good. I only use my macbook for web browsing, some light photo/video editing, so I don't notice any performance issue.

  • @I_Mackenzie
    @I_Mackenzie5 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this explanation. I intend to get a larger monitor next year for my M2 16” MBP, so this info will come in handy.

  • @neozes
    @neozes Жыл бұрын

    This is spot on! Great perspective, very well explained and supported. I am currently using a 4K for coding on 27 inch, and I am thinking about switching.

  • @simonmaduxx6777
    @simonmaduxx6777 Жыл бұрын

    Painful numbers aside, thanks for making this. Ive been a mac user for over 20 years and this one STILL throws me for a loop. Im looking for 27" right now, i dont need 4k nor 32"! this really sucks. Most importantly, the note about the performance impact is FANTASTIC- thank you for that. Ive always used scaled on my retina laptops, as the default resolution and its huge windows are annoying as heck. thanks again.

  • @socke4853

    @socke4853

    2 ай бұрын

    Which you got now

  • @regnam503
    @regnam503 Жыл бұрын

    Hi there. Just wanted to say thank you for your video. I'm not related to video editing in any way but it did shed more light on display selection for programming work. I was kinda worried about the external display situation on macOS as well as it was my first attempt and I didn't want the laptop performance to degrade. I was interested in a 24 inch display as opposed to 27 inch as my table is rather small. I borrowed a Full HD/1080p Dell U2414H from a friend. It worked fine but the fonts were rather painful to look at. I started researching 2K/1440p and 4K options but I didn't want to make a blind purchase. Instead I found a slightly used Dell P2423D (a 2K/1440p) model which gives a PPI of 123. The seller was kind enough to let me plug in my laptop and play around for some time to figure out whether it would be OK. I ended up buying it with roughly a 30% discount. The fonts might not be Retina but they are definitely better on 1440p than on 1080p. The laptop (MBP 16 2019 with i7) is a little bit more warm than usual, the fans are being silent. Hope this helps more people collecting their data points.

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    Жыл бұрын

    For programming on a 24”, 1440p is definitely a good option!

  • @n2o2co2h2o

    @n2o2co2h2o

    8 ай бұрын

    Didn't your 24-inch 1440P screen make the text too small to read? Or do you use scale?

  • @regnam503

    @regnam503

    8 ай бұрын

    @@n2o2co2h2o I use the default resolution of 2560x1440, looks fine to me. I'm no expert though, and you're better off trying the prospective display for yourself, at least for a couple of minutes.

  • @n2o2co2h2o

    @n2o2co2h2o

    8 ай бұрын

    @@regnam503 Thanks for the answer. I'm not an expert either. The ideal would actually be to test before buying. But it's unlikely for me to find a 24" 1440p monitor. In fact, this will be my third monitor that I will set up together with two other 24" 1080p monitors. I also think that it might be a bit confusing for me to work with as there will be monitors of the same size with different densities (1080p and 1440). I don't intend to use scale. I usually need to read texts and read graphics.

  • @danparker7218
    @danparker72189 ай бұрын

    very helpful thanks! this has cleared up the issues I've been experiencing using design software on my 27inch screen.

  • @starl8ght898
    @starl8ght898 Жыл бұрын

    This was a fabulous video and really informative thanks for taking the time to put it together.

  • @bashful228
    @bashful2282 жыл бұрын

    Good review of this issue, I've notice the performance hit on my older Intel MBP, M1 mini not seeing it on 2x Dell 4Ks. Tangentially, people might not know you can Option click on scaled to get access to the native resolutions for your monitor (the old list of resolutions). Also with Monetary we can now adjust the refresh rate (which Macs used to be able to back in the day but Apple removed that years ago, I don't recall when but a long time ago).

  • @xerotolerant

    @xerotolerant

    Жыл бұрын

    I did not know you need to option click for native resolutions. Thanks for mentioning it.

  • @macboyyhd9811

    @macboyyhd9811

    Жыл бұрын

    I have been able to adjust my monitors refresh rate since catalina

  • @hugoleung6529
    @hugoleung6529 Жыл бұрын

    this is really informational video. as a people that using both macbook for school and pc and console for gaming, choosing 2k and 4k is really pain in the ass. i am using a 27inch 4k60hz monitor, it was quite perfect. it runs fine on consoles, for some games on pc that needed too much hardware powers, I could lower the settings, or just set the resolution in 1080p, which is a perfect scaling. and the switch only supports 1080p, so a 4k monitor is perfect. but I have been playing some fps and racing games that I would like a high refresh rate monitor. a 4k144hz is really expensive, and needs lots of power to run. while a 2k160hz-ish monitor is in a more affordable price range and it requires less hardware powers, and it is better for mac. but all consoles, none of them support 1440p. and i think many websites or old applications on windows are designed for 1080p, 1440p is just in a awkward position for someone like me that is not using the monitor for a sole purpose.

  • @eduardointech
    @eduardointech Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!! I have that issues, I didn't understand the reason until now

  • @chadz9172
    @chadz9172 Жыл бұрын

    oh wow, this!! This is exactly what I've been looking for! Thank you very much!

  • @DanielFNG
    @DanielFNG2 жыл бұрын

    Nice summary of this issue. Only thing I would say is that, at least in my opinion, the difference in text clarity between 27 1440p and 27 4k is very noticeable on Mac. I'm currently running a 1440p display for gaming and a 4k display largely for content consumption or software development, which is much of my day job. Admittedly though I don't really use GPU intensive programs on my 4k monitor so I've never run in to the performance issues you mention.

  • @_Digitalguy

    @_Digitalguy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same here, and same on Windows 2, 1440p is usable, but 4k is another level, especially for text

  • @teemuvesala9575

    @teemuvesala9575

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@_Digitalguy Well it isn't the same on Windows. MacOS' text rendering engine is worse than ClearType on Windows. MacOS relies more on high resolution to make the text sharp.

  • @_Digitalguy

    @_Digitalguy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@teemuvesala9575 Yes, I noticed that lower resolution on MacOS is worse, having said that even on Windows the move from 1440p to 2160p is noticeable

  • @teemuvesala9575

    @teemuvesala9575

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@_Digitalguy Depends on the screen size. 27" is still fine, in fact ideal for 1440p from normal viewing distance. You have to use scaling if you have 4K 27" monitor which makes some programs having blurry text since they don't work with scaling too well. Above 27" yes, 4K is worth it.

  • @iviv1940

    @iviv1940

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello, what upscaling do you use for 4K 27 monitor? How much memory and power does it take?

  • @nitroexpress9928
    @nitroexpress9928 Жыл бұрын

    Got used to run my 27'' 4k display with a 200% scaling on a PC, UI & fonts size on Mac OS with standard ("like 1080p") scaling looks pretty similar, so it's not a problem personally for me.

  • @fred4838
    @fred48387 ай бұрын

    Love this insight, struggling with pixel density myself, found this very helpful!

  • @kirkegodfrey414
    @kirkegodfrey41411 ай бұрын

    Really APPRECIATE this info!

  • @giandeli
    @giandeli Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. I actually have 2 of the same monitors for my custom desktop and was worried 1440p would look bad at 27" in macOS. I just spent a ton on a m1pro 14" and didn't want to have to spend more money on a new monitor. Quick question what thunderbolt dock do you use? Also while it's true that these ProArt displays are factory calibrated and are pretty accurate, there are definitely panel variances. Mine had slightly different color between the two. If you can borrow a color calibrator from a friend it makes them 👌.

  • @grininventor

    @grininventor

    Жыл бұрын

    The thunderbolt dock that he uses is either the Caldigit TS3+ or TS4

  • @juanespana2897

    @juanespana2897

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi, I just bought the 14” MBP, and I’ve always wanted to buy the Asus ProArt 27” 4K. After seeing this video I understand the issue, my only concern is that I work a lot with Salesforce and spreadsheets so I’m worried the text will look blurry on the 1440p Asus ProArt 27” I also want to mention I do photo and video editing so 4k sounds better for that use. Can you tell me how it looks since you have the same configuration? Thanks!

  • @ToldbyNick
    @ToldbyNick2 жыл бұрын

    DUDE! I just got the 27 in asus pro art 4K a couple weeks ago. I run an M1 base MacBook Air and I HAVE noticed the performance drop, especially when editing raw in Lightroom. This explanation was awesome, as I have been using the 1440 p scaling and this now makes perfect sense. Now I must consider - do I swap it for 1440 version?? Haha thanks a TON for this video man!

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is totally up to you! I found that editing photos I didn't see enough of a performance drop for the switch and would enjoy the 4K resolution. I swapped it out because of all of the 3D and VFX tools that I use, this is where I saw the biggest drop in performance

  • @jsparger
    @jsparger Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for explaining your personal experience with this. I wasn’t sure how big of an issue this would be.

  • @diegosantana8436
    @diegosantana84365 ай бұрын

    Good explanation. It was so difficult to find an article o video that explain this so well. Congratulations.

  • @syedabdulhalim23
    @syedabdulhalim237 ай бұрын

    OMG this information is GOLD. Thank you, man! I subbed!

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the sub! Glad to have ya 👏

  • @21dazzer
    @21dazzer2 жыл бұрын

    I have a 1440p monitor as my second screen for my 5K iMac. Obviously, the scaling is perfect but I couldn't have a 1440p for my main screen. Compared to the retina screen on the iMac, it's just too low-res. However, it means that in therm of upgrading my iMac to a Studio, I only have two choices - LG Ultrafine and a Studio Display. The iMac's screen is by far the best I've ever used!

  • @robgerety

    @robgerety

    2 жыл бұрын

    or a used Apple Thunderbolt Display maybe?

  • @residenttouristprod

    @residenttouristprod

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robgerety I wondered about those as well. However, what is the life expectancy on the Thunderbolt Monitor?

  • @robgerety

    @robgerety

    Жыл бұрын

    @@residenttouristprod No clue. I expect mine will likely outlive me.

  • @regis_red

    @regis_red

    Жыл бұрын

    @@residenttouristprod Mine works perfectly some 12 years after I’ve bought it.

  • @Maxfli82

    @Maxfli82

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. The difference between retina and non-retina was just too jarring for me.

  • @thepurpleufo
    @thepurpleufo Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the great real-life description of the problem and the fix you discovered. I'll have to watch this video at least one more time to get it soaked into my head, but that won't be a problem, since I liked your "style."

  • @Gamiliell
    @Gamiliell Жыл бұрын

    you certainly have been through quite a bit of palaver over this monitor and I appreciate you sharing this as I am looking for a monitor and do not have a lot of experience … this is the best video I could have discovered and I think it will save me a lot of time … thanks so much

  • @azul20011
    @azul200112 жыл бұрын

    This was extremely informative Hunter, although I don't suffer directly with this issue (I'm using 1440p on 27' but I don't do anything crazy GPU wise), it's always good to know the why's on Apple because you can suffer (or benefit) from it some other time. Thanks for this!

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you! This is definitely an issue a lot of people suffer from without even knowing

  • @MatthewDoyle81
    @MatthewDoyle817 ай бұрын

    I run a 32 inch 4K and it’s scaled as you’ve said. Now you’ve explained to me why it’s so much slower in graphics intense situations than 1080 or native 4K. As an office worker on spreadsheets and also in Lightroom for photo work on the weekends I think the best outcome for me performance wise is to switch to 1080p (which is massive on a 32 inch monitor) for now. Really appreciate the deep dive, explained a lot for me, thank you!

  • @kathrynck

    @kathrynck

    6 ай бұрын

    Honestly 1080p looks _extremely_ blocky at 32". Even 1440p is a little blocky at 32". I'm kinda amazed that mac's are still stumbling over scaling issues. They seem to be a victim of their own iphone "retina" marketing hype, which really doesn't apply in a 1:1 way to a monitor on a desk. And their chart with red & green zones is pretty bad. The size ranges of their categories are wider than their green zones, which makes the chart useless. On a reasonable budget, you likely want a 27-28" 1440p (no scaling), or perhaps a 32" 1440p (also no scaling) if you sit back from the screen a ways (over 30" from eye to screen). For 4k to look right at native scaling, you'd need a 40-42" monitor. At that size there's very limited options for monitors, as most panels of that size are 'monitor-ized' tv's (with some drawbacks as a result). Also 4k is a monstrous graphical workload, so it will negatively impact performance unless you have quite an enthusiast computer build. Personally, I trained for graphical productivity on iMac's in 1999/2000... and I couldn't get away from mac's fast enough once free of having to use the machines in the graphics studio at uni. They were brand new candy-translucent models, very posh, but they were just terrible platforms. Inferior in every meaningful way than my 1996 pc at home (unless desk aesthetic is meaningful I suppose). But regardless of my personal views on macs, at native resolution, you typically want 20-22" for 1080p (maybe 24/25" if you sit way back), 27-28" for 1440p (maybe 32" if you sit way back), or 38-43" for 4k (2160p) _maybe_ 32" if you typically stick your nose in the monitor, or maybe 48" if you wall-mount it for some distance. And that's all just based on eyes and distance, not brand related. The performance impact of pixel count will be drastically greater than whether scaling is turned on. 1080p is about 2m pixels, 1440p is about 3.7m pixels, and 4k is about 8.1m pixels. Graphical performance will mostly scale linearly with those pixel counts. And that's all based on graphical processing, which also isn't brand related. Scaling _should_ be an incredibly minor graphical workload in comparison to the workload of a larger resolution itself, unless there's something very seriously wrong with modern macs.

  • @orion_theartist
    @orion_theartist5 ай бұрын

    Exactly the answer I was looking for thanks!

  • @chrisinmadison
    @chrisinmadison4 ай бұрын

    Awesome insight, thanks for sharing. I returned a $1000 BenQ design monitor recently because it was woefully dim at max brightness and I was having unexpected issues with video being choppy in full-screen mode and InDesign running slow. I thought I'd do a little more research before buying an ASUS 4K, and so glad I stumbled onto your video. Totally makes sense. Thanks buddy!

  • @EugWanker
    @EugWanker2 жыл бұрын

    I have two 27" iMacs, a 2010 1440p (109 ppi) model, and a 2017 2880p/5K (218 ppi) model. I ran them side-by-side for years, with the 1440p model acting as a secondary display to the 2017 model. I'm not a creative pro, but did do some light photo editing. For image editing I was perfectly happy using the 1440p display. However, for text quality, the difference was completely obvious, much worse on the 1440p display, particularly with small fonts in for example Excel spreadsheets. While from normal seating distances it may be hard to resolve the individual pixels on a 27" 1440p display, the differences in the way text is rendered makes the text quality obviously inferior. It's too bad there isn't say a 29"-30" 5K Asus ProArt display. That would provide around 200 ppi, which would be perfect IMO at typical seating distances. 200 ppi is "Retina" at about 17", and Apple's ergonomic guidelines recommend a seating distance of 20" or more. I prefer to sit at about 25" away, and at that distance I find my 27" 5K iMac's default font sizing just a touch small. I could sit closer but I have older eyes than you do, so at closer seating distances I find my eyes get fatigued more quickly. OTOH, like you discovered, 4K at 27" (163 ppi) when scaled at 2X results in font sizing and screen elements that are too large for many people at typical seating distances.

  • @richrollin4867

    @richrollin4867

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a 27" Asus ProArt 1440p. Text looks awful - blurred or sometimes blocky. It's something to do with how Mac OS scales the text. The same monitor looks fantastic when running with Windows - very sharp text. It's an annoying quirk of Mac OS and external monitors with certain resolutions.

  • @DD-zk9hh

    @DD-zk9hh

    6 ай бұрын

    Did you change any new monitor? How's the result?@@richrollin4867

  • @eduart79
    @eduart7911 ай бұрын

    If you use displayport cable instead of hdmi on the LGUN880 monitor, you will have more resolutions, the one I use being perfect both in icon and window size, 3360x1890 at 60Hz, it is the one I use with my mac mini M2 Pro 12c 32gb and 1Tb and I am super glad.

  • @t.t.3627

    @t.t.3627

    8 ай бұрын

    right i use it to this way :)

  • Жыл бұрын

    Thank you very much this is the video I was looking for, you explain in great detail about this issue.

  • @Morangutan2
    @Morangutan24 ай бұрын

    BRO THANKS!!! you helped my in every aspect. Tks!!

  • @jdelgadocr
    @jdelgadocr Жыл бұрын

    Thanks to Hunter for making this video. I wanted a 4K monitor but now I don't want any performance issues. After reading a bunch of comments here and its replies it seems there are two actions that may provide some solution: 1-Make sure the resolution in System Preferences is set to "Default for display" (otherwise set it that way, close and reopen System Pref), then hold down OPTION key while clicking the SCALED option, now it should show more options in the list. For a 4K monitor, choose the 5K resolution (5120*2880). This should enable the real Retina scaling but the monitor will only display what it can. Now check if the performance is affected or not. 2-the other option is to use the Betterdummy (Betterdisplay) utility to adjust and enable the HiDPI (Retina) scaling that is not enabled with some 4K monitors. Also, if you are using a MacBook (not a Mini or any other desktop model) try closing the lid so the built in display will go OFF and the whole GPU will be dedicated to the external monitor(s). Can somebody with a 4K monitor (and having issues) try these and post the findings and monitor model here??

  • @beckyharris8692

    @beckyharris8692

    Жыл бұрын

    (this was a really helpful summary as well - thank you!)

  • @jdelgadocr

    @jdelgadocr

    Жыл бұрын

    The tricky detail here is the iMac 21.5" was 4K so there should be something else activated so the system properly perform using that resolution. My conclusion is it seems MacOS also takes in account the SIZE of the monitor to determine the DPI and define if it is "worthy" of enabling Retina for it, among maybe some other things, so the performance is not affected. For Apple, the Retina reference is 220 DPI. 4K in a 27" is definitely not Retina BUT... 4K in a 22" is and 4K in a 24" is close enough. I ended up getting an "LG 24UD58-B 24-Inch 4K UHD IPS Monitor with FreeSync" with a budget price of $280. I was already using a 23" FHD and my use case has very little image editing, mostly Sys Admin stuff. 27" with Retina has to be 5K and the only mainstream models are LG and Apple, around $1300 and $1500, respectively. Not in my budget right now. I checked my needs and I didn't need more screen space but actually better image quality (Retina) for my sight. So a 24" Retina is the way to go for me.

  • @norbert-keizo

    @norbert-keizo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jdelgadocr Have you enabled HiDPI (with BetterDummy or Betterdisplay) on your 27 inch 4k monitor? Does it look like normal? Did performance decreased? Is there any heat issue?

  • @jdelgadocr

    @jdelgadocr

    Жыл бұрын

    @@norbert-keizo After realizing the dpi for a 4K 27 is just slighty better than my 23" 1920*1080, I opt for a LG budget 24" 4K. Even I had to adjust the colors manually, the HiDPI (Retina) was enabled by default with no performance issues.

  • @josephholmes5061
    @josephholmes5061 Жыл бұрын

    I had another thought. I've been working at the scaling issue with a friend for a long time now and I think we've figured out something important regarding what you observed for the slowdown with the 4K monitor. The original theory being that it was all the work to constantly upscale and downscale frames 60X each second. Now it appears as though that's not it at all -- rather it's just a shortage of RAM. Your 13" M1 MacBook comes with either 8 or 16 Gigs of shared memory. I don't think you mentioned which one you got, but certainly all Macs start to slow down as they come close to running short. You can see how they operate if you open Activity Monitor and examine the use of compressed memory for the many running applications, and the residual free memory (in particular, among various other memory measurements). Once you see a lot of apps running with some of their data in RAM having been compressed (that portion gets compressed down to about 40 to 50% of its original size when that's happening, so it frees up more RAM) you can be sure the OS is having to work harder to keep the ball rolling. I find that when my 16 GB 2012 MacBook Pro is down to less than 2 GB "free" it's starting to get complicated and may get very slow, and if it's down to 1 GB free I'm really in trouble and the machine is very prone to becoming highly unresponsive, but intermittently, in a complex pattern. So what we did, my friend used his 2021 14" MacBook Pro M1 Max with 64 GB of RAM to run an experiment I suggested. He's got it connected to a 31.5", 4K NEC display, so it's VRAM requirement (the GPU's share of the shared memory of the SoC Mac) is essentially the same as your 4K ASUS's was. There is a feature in Activity Monitor called "Memory History" that opens a little window and creates a running bar graph of GPU activity. If you just open that little window then do some things like open a new window or scale something or whatever, you can see how much your GPU cores are working as a result. He opened up a 4K video and played it. He changed the scaling of the screen in the Displays system pref, and there was a huge spike in GPU utilization that lasted a fraction of a second, but then it fell back essentially to zero. I.e. it jumped from showing only one tiny square to around 40 tiny squares tall of utilization for just two columns of squares. Same for switching back to the other scaling option. This test shows rather conclusively that the GPU does not have to labor continuously on account of using a different scaling from the "Default", or if it does that that labor is tiny. On the other hand, we do know that gamers using a 4K display with an 8 GB discreet GPU do run into trouble with performance in some degree with some games and some frame rates. So I'm betting that your performance problem had its actual root in a shortage of RAM. E.g. the CPUs or the GPU cores, either one or both, may have been starved for memory to the point of messing with your other program. For me, this is a huge deal, that it's OK to use the scaling options without constantly burdening the GPU and wasting power too, because it means I have about 10 monitors to choose from instead of 2! (all of which are pretty good candidates, but none of which are perfect -- is there such a thing? I'd prefer to see more 5K 27" and 32" displays and/or to see macOS stop scaling user bitmaps whenever native or half native scaling are not being used. Thanks for helping work this out. More science! :-)

  • @2424rocket

    @2424rocket

    Жыл бұрын

    So on my Mac ultra with 128 gigs of RAM… I should not have any scaling problems.?? I have the Mac Studio monitor which is perfectly amazing but I’m looking for a second monitor that isn’t so expensive.

  • @josephholmes5061

    @josephholmes5061

    Жыл бұрын

    @@2424rocket Hi Allen. From what I can tell, from all the evidence I've seen (from many sources) it does appear as though you should have no problem. I too just got a Mac Studio with the Ultra and 128 GB of RAM. I am in much the same boat and have decided to go ahead and place an order for a 27" 4K monitor, the very expensive EIZO CG2700X, which won't ship until "the autumn" to replace a 9-year old Dell 30" U3014, which runs at its native 102 ppi. Opting for this pricey unit makes my bet that both scaling issues will work out fine all that much more difficult, but I went ahead and committed to that plan. So I won't see for myself what happens until those pieces are all put together in a few months. But my friend's testing with his 31.5" 4K NEC showed no hint of any slowing down and the GPU History tool is almost 100% certain to reveal any such rumored GPU labors as continuous (60X per second) scaling of the UI at any non-native ("Looks like" 3840 x 2160 or 1920 x 1080) scaling of any 4K monitor. He understood the point of our test, but when we spoke about it I didn't specifically ask him which two scalings he used when he switched from one to the other, then made a second scaling switch. The only way this 60 FPS scaling extra GPU work alleged in the theory could have been avoided if it is a real thing, was if he only used those two scalings for the test, which is highly unlikely, since he understood the point of the test. But I've just sent him an email to make sure (which two did you use?). He's traveling today but is very attentive to email. I'll add a note here with his reply. When he confirms (most likely) that one of the two scalings was one of the other ones (the ones requiring the scaling) we should be free to feel 99+% certain that the alleged 60/second slowdown is a myth. And that the most likely explanation for the often-observed slowdown is indeed instead a shortage of RAM on some systems. In case I didn't mention the other scaling issue before: At the non-native (i.e. not when choosing Looks like 3840 or 1920 wide) scalings, the OS scales all bitmaps, both UI bitmaps and user bitmaps (e.g. images we have open in Photoshop, etc.). For the user bitmaps, the scale it uses for this bilinear-interpolated scaling uses the size at 1920 wide as the anchor of the progression of scales. So when you choose 2560 wide scaling and open the same file in Photoshop at 100% zoom, the size of the image on screen will be 1920/2560 as big, i.e. exactly 75%. Zoom to 133.3% and it looks the same size, but it will then have been interpolated twice: first down 25% with bilinear (by the OS, making it quite a bit blurrier but at this point it's too tiny to tell) then up 33.3% with nearest neighbor (by Photoshop). Big mess. So for seeing what you're doing just right for sharpening files, i.e. to see your pixels more or less as they really are, you'll want to use Looks like 1920 wide (or could use Looks like 3840 wide but then all icons and text and UI stuff would be crazy tiny) in order to see the image well. It's true that the image will be way too small at the native res of the display (~140 ppi for 31.5" and ~164 ppi for 27") to see the pixels, but zooming to 200% will bring the image to a usable scale for seeing its pixels somewhat clearly, and 300% will likely be ideal for sharpening work. The pixels may not be precisely as crisp as they would look at 100% or 200% on an 102 ppi monitor at its native res, but very close, since nearest neighbor scaling keeps the data perfect that way (each pixel going from 100% to 200% in PS simply becomes a 2x2 block of pixels of identical RGB values), it's just that the sub-pixel designs of the display (visible under a 10X loupe e.g.) cause a 2x2 block of pixels at e.g. 218 ppi (e.g. on your 27" Studio Display or at 220 ppi on my 15" Retina display) to look a little less crisp than a 1x1 pixel block (as it were) on a 109 ppi display. Confusing, isn't it!

  • @2424rocket

    @2424rocket

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for that very very very very long reply. Lol. And congratulations on getting the Mac studio ultra… I’ve had it for a little less than a month and it is just flawless. It is the fastest most powerful computer I’ve ever owned. And I’m loving it. Again, I do have the Mac Studio monitor but what can I buy for a second monitor that’s just decent. It doesn’t have to be great but I do want 4K? I was thinking of a Dell monitor but I’ve heard it has problems and that non-reflective screen cuts down on the sharpness. That would make me crazy. And that stupid blue light protection cannot be shut off.

  • @josephholmes5061

    @josephholmes5061

    Жыл бұрын

    @@2424rocket You're quite welcome. I hope I can unravel these issues correctly for lots of people, not just myself. I just heard back from my friend, who was at an airport, waiting for a long flight. He recalls that he tried at least three and probably four scalings, and they all behaved the same way - no effect on GPU usage except for a moment during the transition to a new scaling. So that means that he had to test at least one of the scalings offered which was one that requires the UI to scale everything on the screen. So that pretty much clinches it. Glad to hear you're loving the new Mac. I'm not surprised. The era of waiting during computing will be, for me, officially over! Finally, after thirty years... And everyone says the box doesn't even get warm -- excellent! I have collected a vast amount of information on the zillions of monitors on the market, because I wanted to be certain I picked the best one for my purposes. Once I decided (finally, after long consideration) that a 4K or 5K 27" would be preferable to a 31.5" 4K, that narrowed the field to about 10 contestants. Those include 3 or 4 (if you count the alternate LG version) OLEDs (LG, LG, ASUS and Philips, only one of which is shipping now, prices ~ 3 or 4 thousand, down to just $1,100 for the Philips). Then there are the two 5K 27", the one you already have and its predecessor the LG 5K, which isn't as good as the 27" Studio Display. After that it's a range of IPS panels, varying from a minimum of about $900 (for the ones with gamuts that I'd consider OK, i.e. they must have at least 98% coverage of P3, and close to 100% of Adobe is a bonus) up to a max of about $3,500 (for the EIZO CG2700X, available in the fall). Dell has fewer 27" models of interest, mainly the... heck, I might as well just paste in my list. Here goes: My preferred among the ten have their numbers in bold face: #'s 1, 3, 4, 5, 8, 9, and 11

  • @2424rocket

    @2424rocket

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, after running the computer for five hours, I put my hand on it and it’s not even warm! How is this even possible? And it goes from dead cold to up and running in about 10 seconds. It is simply amazing. I could not see the list of your monitors… I really don’t wanna spend more than five or $600 on a second monitor. I don’t know. I went to Best Buy and looked at all these monitors and they are such crap next to the Apple monitor. But I just can’t do another $1700 right now. I just spent $7000 on the computer and the monitor… That’s enough for now. And now, the hunt for the perfect mouse. So far I think the MX anywhere 3 might be the new one for me.

  • @SusannahPerri
    @SusannahPerri11 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this detailed explanation! Although I didn’t follow every single detail, I got the basics and the gist.I really appreciate your help. 😃

  • @fernandovargasleal
    @fernandovargasleal Жыл бұрын

    wow, great video. Was doing research on that topic and couldn't find reliable info until now. Congrats!

  • @RaphaelMatto
    @RaphaelMatto Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this. I actually love the larger scale of the UI on 4k 27 inch & find my 5k 27 inch Studio Monitor's text too small. But I'm in my 40s & my eyes are not as fresh as they were. I'll note that although the UI scale may seem large to some, images and videos still display using all the native pixels, kind of the best of both worlds IMHO. Downsides are some apps UIs don't love being big, for example Davinci Resolve. It can feel cramped w/the OS UI scaled up & there are no options for scaling it down; that's an app by app issue tho, other apps can be adjusted to account for that-or they do it automatically.

  • @gsreads

    @gsreads

    Жыл бұрын

    But we gotta think about how Windows is doing it better and apple doesn't care about customers using devices that are not their brand.

  • @ernestoditerribile

    @ernestoditerribile

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gsreads there are monitors like real DCI 4K or even DCI 8K monitors(Bit pricey over 20K, but cars cost way more) from EIZO. Most people are too stupid to not notice that they are scamming themselves when saying they have a 4K TV or monitor, while they just got a UltraHD cheap crappy screen.

  • @ernestoditerribile

    @ernestoditerribile

    Жыл бұрын

    They EIZO DCI screens scale way better then the cheap stuff.

  • @aranykai
    @aranykai Жыл бұрын

    To be more precise, your system is not scaling up anything. It's rendering natively at 5k, exactly as it would be if you were using a 5k display. Integer scaling that down to 1440p is trivial and not causing your issue. You were effectively rendering blender at 5k and expecting it to run like 1080p.

  • @thailandertravel

    @thailandertravel

    9 ай бұрын

    My 24” 1080p monitor with Mac Mini 2018 hurts my eyes to use very disorienting

  • @TakutoDE

    @TakutoDE

    8 ай бұрын

    While you are technically correct, this is not obvious unless you are very technical. This explanation did help me and I am sure it did help others. You dinging it int that way is unhelpful at best and elitist bullcrap at worst.

  • @anushgopalakrishnan

    @anushgopalakrishnan

    8 ай бұрын

    @@TakutoDE but I think if you're making a video about this the least you could do is research the issue and understand it better

  • @tordb

    @tordb

    8 ай бұрын

    Confidently incorrect

  • @user-bc7cb8uu7e

    @user-bc7cb8uu7e

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@TakutoDEIt's actually kind of an important difference. If the performance on a 4k monitor scaled to look like 1440p is the same as running the 5k monitor at integer scaling, it kind of negates some of what the video was saying. It also, of course, would mean that buying the studio display would not fix this issue, while the video sort of implies it would.

  • @DieterVanHolder
    @DieterVanHolder Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video. The scaling thing was very baffling to me after getting my first Apple computer (Macbook Pro). I just couldn't get it to feel right with my BenQ 4K monitor. Thanks to your video I've decided to go for a 27" 1440p monitor for it.

  • @yannpoco
    @yannpoco Жыл бұрын

    It’s a very informative video with excellent quality. I learned a lot and it’s super helpful for me to select monitors ! BTW I love your setup and your room decorations.

  • @andreiortizv
    @andreiortizv2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent video! So, if I want to buy a 32" monitor, what would you recomend for me?

  • @AlexLapugean

    @AlexLapugean

    2 жыл бұрын

    I guess only if you find a 5k one, if you do not want the performance drop due to scaling. At 4k, it's either way too small or way too large at non-scaled resolusions. I have a 32" monitor and it is great, but I have to scale it.

  • @Ken-zg3ze
    @Ken-zg3ze Жыл бұрын

    This is something that people really need to know. I was always wondering why they used odd resolutions. I also knew that they upscaled 2x for their Retina displays but I never put the two together. Thanks!

  • @JustinMikola
    @JustinMikola Жыл бұрын

    Great explanation! Thank you! I’m new to MAC and this video has been very helpful.

  • @al1gned
    @al1gned Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing this, it was really helpful.

  • @zaneparkinson
    @zaneparkinson2 жыл бұрын

    Really awesome video! I've done a bunch of research on macOS scaling and monitors and came to a similar conclusion, but your video summed up my hours of research in just a few minutes! My biggest concern with getting a 1440p monitor (especially with a matte finish) is text clarity. I had the old 27" Apple Cinema Display (1440p but glossy) and sold it because it was aging, had a good resale value, and I didn't want it failing on me. So torn between getting a 4K monitor and hoping the 1080p scaling doesn't bother me too much or sticking to 1440p because I absolutely do GPU intensive work at times. Tl;Dr: How does text look to you on the matte screen? I'm coming from a 1440p monitor so I'm used to 1440p @27", but know matte finishes usually make text clarity worse...

  • @parkame1

    @parkame1

    2 жыл бұрын

    matte finish ruins everything..not just text. its frustrating manufactures don't even provide glossy options. they straight up act like glossy coating does't exist at all.

  • @parkame1

    @parkame1

    2 жыл бұрын

    my guess is for glossy displays they have to dial up the nits for decent viewing experience. and cowards don't want to do that.

  • @ZiFrenZie

    @ZiFrenZie

    Жыл бұрын

    Can’t you just independently increase the system-wide text size in MacOS if you want bigger text?

  • @iantellam9970
    @iantellam99702 жыл бұрын

    I noticed this on my Mac MIni when I plugged in a 4k screen, and ended up going with one of the 'between' ones. I have fairly undemanding usage computationally speaking and personally haven't really noticed much performance dip in general use despite running two monitors so just keep it at the scaling that looks good to me. I can see why this might be an issue though, for those who need more GPU.

  • @robertd1965
    @robertd1965 Жыл бұрын

    Dude.. this is one of the best videos on Mac monitors and resolution I've seen. Fantastic research man. Thanks for throwing this up.

  • @VidaSmerc
    @VidaSmerc6 ай бұрын

    very good video, I've been looking for answers to these questions for a long time and couldn't figure out why I felt better at 13' than when the display is a larger resolution.

  • @aleksandarandjelkovic8650
    @aleksandarandjelkovic86502 жыл бұрын

    Finally a simple and easy to understand explanation! Many thanks, you've earned yourself another follower! P.S. I've been searching for a proper monitor for my MBP these past few days and I've also stumbled upon the bjango article, I just left it for a later read and it has been waiting for me to go through it, until I opened the link you shared and noticed I've got 2 of them side-by-side :) Btw, had my eye on the new line from Dell (U2723QE) but eventually I ended up with ordering U2722DE yesterday, for the same reasons you're mentioning. Can't wait to see it in action!

  • @blasborg

    @blasborg

    Жыл бұрын

    how're you feeling about your choice? I'm in a conundrum now, since I have an Intel MBP and a M1 Pro MBP both (one personal, one for work) and want a 27" monitor that can handle both without causing scaling performance issues :(

  • @arminvogt8690

    @arminvogt8690

    Жыл бұрын

    I fetched the u2723qe 4K 27". I love it. My m1 air loves it too. No issues. Using the scaled (second from the right) resolution.

  • @blasborg

    @blasborg

    Жыл бұрын

    And I ended up with dell U2722DE. It's super sharp even at "just" native 1440p, and beautiful colors, I love the panel and versatility of the powered USBC port too. Only downside of observed is that the stand is pretty wobbly but I have mostly mitigated this by stabilizing my table and putting it on a cutting board on which I put rubber feet on it 😅 atop the table

  • @matbishopsa
    @matbishopsa Жыл бұрын

    I use a 27" 4K display with scaling set to 2560x1440, with a base 14" MacBook Pro. To be completely honest, I don't know if the performance affects me - my computer is plenty fast. I'll definitely be keeping this in mind for future upgrades, though.

  • @justicefreeman6598

    @justicefreeman6598

    7 ай бұрын

    I also have MBP 14'' 2021 and I want to buy external monitor. Looking through articles I understand that I need displays with ~220 PPI for native (no-scaling) interface or ~110PPI with (2x scaling) for normal UI interface size. I tried Xiaomi Redmi Display 27'' 2560x1440 (109PPI) but with "default" resolution UI interface was too small. So I set scaling to 2x but pixels started to be visible. Now I wonder if I should ignore it, buy the monitor and sit farther from the monitor or buy 4K 27'' monitor. I'm not sure that performance will be noticeable as I'm mostly writing code or consuming content on my Macbook. What are your thoughts?

  • @Doofymchot
    @Doofymchot6 ай бұрын

    Thanks for the video!

  • @ramosgot
    @ramosgot10 ай бұрын

    Just the explanation I've been looking for, thanks.

  • @tsakuyo
    @tsakuyo Жыл бұрын

    Interesting video. I had the same thoughts in terms of downscaling 4k vs. native 1440p. I tried out both versions and ended up with triple 4k monitors (DisplayLink) downscaled to 2304x1296 on an M1 Mac Mini and I have no issues with performance. The flexibility of the 4k screens lets me pick the perfect scaling and I'm super happy with it.

  • @dingdong2103

    @dingdong2103

    Жыл бұрын

    I run an M1 MBP with 5120x1440 resolution (Samsung Odyssey G9 49"). This vlogger apparently doesn't know that you can use native resolutions on Macos.

  • @nhs.14

    @nhs.14

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dingdong2103 these commenters apparently also doesn’t understand natuve 4k at 27 inch make everything look so small smh

  • @faraztheawsum

    @faraztheawsum

    Жыл бұрын

    I just purchased a 4k 32 inch 144hz dell monitor to run with my m1 mac air. I'm wondering if this was the right decision now, pls advise?

  • @johnb5739

    @johnb5739

    Жыл бұрын

    @@faraztheawsum do u have any performance updates?

  • @faraztheawsum

    @faraztheawsum

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnb5739 yeah it's perfectly fine lol. I don't notice any performance issues. I changed the text size on the display and it's very fast and clean

  • @demazy
    @demazy Жыл бұрын

    Yes. And I kept my 4K at 4K and found so many work arounds to scale up menus, sidebars and stuff. It is possible. Web browsers have the possibility to zoom website and remember them. Finder side bar, mail side bar, some others Apple app can be scaled up in preferences of the apps or in your Mac settings. And now a lot of other office apps can be scale up. So far there just some menus and some apps I use less and folders and files in Finder that are a bit small but that’s fine. Very happy with my 4K for photo editing.

  • @zaxmaxlax

    @zaxmaxlax

    Жыл бұрын

    I would never let go a 4k display for a 1440p one, specially if I'm doing photo editing.

  • @Wuntrey

    @Wuntrey

    Жыл бұрын

    Im mad yall got 4k and Only editing pics.... Lol. Bro build a new game base or sumthing. Its enough 4k pics out there. Make More Use. Yall playing retros on ps5. Lol. More money means greatness, do more. Mamba mentality. All this talk to edit some pics what else yall doing w these diplays you payed for it to do what? Just edit? Aw man cmon. Lol. Let me know when yall going shoppin iGot shit to sell yall too. Yall buy just to buy. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @merry-cat

    @merry-cat

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Wuntrey is that English?

  • @CinceTheDay

    @CinceTheDay

    Жыл бұрын

    this is the best way too go anyway as a windows user where scaling was and still is absolute trash I'm speaking of experience. however, if you scale "what you use" instead of letting it be handled by the OS, the quality of the scaling is defined by every respective app and how good their developers implemented it. google does a flawless job here others do not, some don't offer scaling at all. thus it always comes down to one thing: you need 100%... ...near vision clarity eyes;)

  • @zaxmaxlax

    @zaxmaxlax

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CinceTheDay How is windows scaling "trash" or any worse than apple's implementation? Also, if you use a dedicated GPU you can literally run any resolution and scale you want with tons of customizations.

  • @jeffreybeutels7663
    @jeffreybeutels76632 ай бұрын

    Well put, thanks!

  • @KysLife
    @KysLife8 ай бұрын

    THANK YOU!!! Just got my monitor yesterday and I was so confused why it was giving me so many issues! You explained this amazingly!!

  • @Elrevisor2k
    @Elrevisor2k Жыл бұрын

    Terrific Video, I never notice this as I worked on a 32” 4k on small letters but with 32” I could see the text with no issues. Really good analysis thanks 🙏

  • @kostenko888
    @kostenko8882 жыл бұрын

    Спасибо за такой ролик! Благодаря тебе не сделал ошибку!

  • @itshunterking

    @itshunterking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Super glad I could help!!

  • @nav579
    @nav579 Жыл бұрын

    I love using my 4k monitor on my M1 MacBook Pro. The performance is buttery smooth. But I’m not doing 3D rendering - I’m using it for my software development workflow. Sounds like this won’t be an issue for most users.

  • @dreistheman7797

    @dreistheman7797

    5 ай бұрын

    What monitor are you using and how is the text clarity? I'm using a 34" 1440p with only 109 ppi, and the difference in clarity is immediately noticeable after switching from my Windows work machine to my mac. I find myself needing to adjust constantly when switching between the 2.

  • @nav579

    @nav579

    5 ай бұрын

    @@dreistheman7797 Text clarity is great. I’m using as my primary monitor the LG 27GN950. I use it for both my Mac and my Windows PC.

  • @colin-elliott
    @colin-elliott Жыл бұрын

    Oh my god thank you so much for putting this information out there in a digestible manor! This was so hard to understand for me before your video.

  • @christianneumann9027
    @christianneumann9027 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot for your great explanations, my compliment!

  • @samsonkirigua
    @samsonkirigua Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant! You’ve nailed it! This is the explanation I was looking for. It perfectly explains why the old 27inch Thunderbolt Display was at 1440p, and the new studio display and iMacs are at 5K.

  • @arminvogt8690
    @arminvogt8690 Жыл бұрын

    You tackled a still hot topic here, congrats on the good presentation, Hunter. And thanks for that. My experience is this: after much of a headache i could not bring myself to pair my very nice retina macbook display with a QHD monitor, being so much inferior in resolution. So i chose the DELL Ultrasharp U2723qe ("black ips"). The display is sharp and resembles the colors and contrasts of the retina display easily, even if not the full retina resolution. I am working simultaniously on the macbook (m1 air) with open lid, sitting in front of me (using the macbook trackpad and keyboard) and the Dell resides above - continuing the display in the vertical. I was afraid, both panels would not match and would give me tears everyday when working. This is not the case: the DELL panel is as good as the apple. I use a high resolution (in contrast to the so called low resolution shown when you click "scaled" with option key) that is described as 3008x1692. That perfectily matches the finest setting ("more space") called "1680x1050" on the air retina display. Never ever would I use a QHD instead! (mostly working as a programmer with IDEs and terminals)

  • @johnb5739

    @johnb5739

    Жыл бұрын

    hey, i'm also looking for 27" 4k monitor for SD, do u met any performance issues due to non-integer scaling? how does fonts looks in IDE @ 1692p scaling?

  • @arminvogt8690

    @arminvogt8690

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnb5739 Hey, I am using visual studio code most of the day and sometimes i vary the scaling within vs code (command +/-). No issues since the fonts are rendered by the macos. Its a dream. No performance issues either. Remember the M1 Air has no fan and would need to throttle the cpu if it gets too hot. I am using "Usage" to have temperature and core and gpu usage. Its fine. And again, anything below 4k will never be able to allow for "HiDpi" resolution in macos, resulting in less pixels per character or icon etc. with 27" 4k i cannot see pixels when at a distance of 20 cm to the display. 32" will not give you more real estate, it will only allow for greater viewing distance. Because: you will not want the highest resolution (that is 4k natively without scaling) since it is then a LowDPI mode -> which uses less pixels per font etc. Hope to be helpful.

  • @thiago.almeida

    @thiago.almeida

    Жыл бұрын

    I'd like to thank you so much for sharing. I'm almost buying a dell U2723qe, which is really expensive in my country. I have a m1 macbook pro 2021 and I work a lot with programming. May I ask you if you still have the same opinion even after this much time?

  • @meeno_the_man
    @meeno_the_manАй бұрын

    Mucho helpful. Thanks.

  • @ProgramistaNaBudowie
    @ProgramistaNaBudowie2 ай бұрын

    Thanks a lot for explaining that!