4/11/2023 0 Comments High resolution monity![]() Adobe application do not the have windows scale the display so their Applications can take advantage of all the pixels and resolution the display has to offer. You want to be able to use the high resolution for editing.Īs I wrote Windows can scale the system display for application to lower resolutions. It is not what you want for an image editor like Photoshop. The the bridge only displays previews and thumbnails. However it may work well for a Application like the bridge. Scaling the display defeats the reason to have a high resolution display. Scaling the display to 1/2 resolution is easy for its and even multiplayer 2x A 200DPI display would be like a 100DPI display with 1/4 the number of pixels. You can can have an OS like Windows scale your display image effectively run you display at a lower resolution so that things display larger. And the editor should have a UI that is easy to see and use. ![]() Ideally For a Image editor you want a high resolution display so you can edit your images at a high resolution near or actual print quality. If I am incorrect, I would appreciate hearing about it.Īnd if there is a way to scale the interface to 200% on a PC, I would also like to hear about it.īut what I really want to hear about is a new version of Bridge for the PC that fixes the interface problem as Adobe has for Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign, all of which work perfectly on my Yoga 3 Pro laptop. I cannot read any of the text in the interface without a magnifying glass. And since my laptop, despite the high resolution, has a small screen, Bridge is completely unusable on my laptop. Therefore, I am assuming that this problem is fixed for Macs but not for PCs. My PC version of Bridge says CC, and in the Creative Cloud app, there is no option to install CC 2014. However, this version is apparently not available for PCs, and this is indeed documented in the Adobe help for Bridge. There apparently is a version of Bridge (CC 2014) that is available for Macs that allows scaling of the interface so it is useful. I have a Lenovo Yoga 3 Pro with a similar high-resolution screen. So an image's pixels are displayed at the displays DPI resolution and will not be the same size on all displays. They only display one size pixel usually their native pixel size. Display are run at one DPI resolution they do not render image at the resolution set into the image file. Pixels have no size till there is a resolution involved. ![]() Resolution is DPI Pixel density pixel size. Will displayed on your 13.6" displays in and area 1/5 the size that they displayed in on you 27" display. So the same of pixels displayed on you 27" display. Your laptop 15.6 display displays 3200x1800 pixels that a density 235pixels per inch pixels are 1/235" x 1/235" there are 55,225 px per sq inch. You desktop 27" display displays 2560x1440 pixels that a density 108pixel per inch pixels are 1/109" x 1/109" there are 11,881 px per sq inch. To get you display resolution you need to factor the display size.īoth of your displays have same 16:9 aspect ratio but have different different size and number of pixels. 2560x1440px and 3200x1800px are not resolution they are number of pixels your displays display. You need to get a better grasp on resolution. Still I am working on a big 27 inch screen as well with a resolution 2560 x 1440 and I do not have this problem. ![]()
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