Pixel pitch conundrum

Thank you for the information.
 
One is a 2 year old panel and the other is a this year panel.. it's expected that they were able to cram the pixels closer together..
But how for the same size panel more or less at the same resolution. I was thinking there may be more to it than what I know.
 
But how for the same size panel more or less at the same resolution. I was thinking there may be more to it than what I know.

The site could be wrong. Otherwise it could be a 2K panel restricted to 1080.
 
The site could be wrong. Otherwise it could be a 2K panel restricted to 1080.
I'm not sure what to make of it. A 2k panel should have a smaller dot pitch and also not list 81ppi. Maybe I should suggest an edit and see what they make of it. Xiaomi also doesn't list the pixel pitch in the tech specs.
 
Well this gets even stranger. A 2k panel or 2560 would be closer to 0.233. Google Gemini also claims it to be 0.311. Amazon lists it as 0.26 but I take those with a grain of salt. A 24" panel matches closely though at 0.276 but this is listed as 27".
 
How do people still live with 1080p displays?

Even if purely for gaming I would tear my eyes out.
 
How do people still live with 1080p displays?

Even if purely for gaming I would tear my eyes out.
I don't know how people can see with 4000 pixels crammed in. My eyes struggle to see even 0.3mm and I've always preferred slightly larger for design work.
 
I don't know how people can see with 4000 pixels crammed in. My eyes struggle to see even 0.3mm and I've always preferred slightly larger for design work.

Yeah but then do QHD at least.

1080p on a 27-inch is pretty damn horrendous.

And also scaling exists, you can just make it as big as you want while retaining the pixel density.
 
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