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This is basically what I meant. The 1060 is capable of displaying in 2560x1440, but you will need to turn down some settings to get good frame rates. It's certainly not an ideal card for 2560x1440 on high settings.
Also, not sure if this was sarcasm, but if not 1440p is 2560x1440.
Yeah I noticed that normally 4k is 3840x2160, but then there's another version of 2160p that IS 4k pixels wide but that's considered the "ultrawide" version.It wasn't sarcasm to me , and no it is not 2560x1440. There is no 1440p. It doesn't exist as a standard. "p" is meaningless unless there is a contrasting "i" version, and it doesn't help anybody know what resolution you're talking about since you just dropped with width information. If you don't like writing out the numbers, you could call it QHD, which is a standard definition. Your "4K" TV is also likely not 4K, but UHD. Marketing departments screw up everything for everyone, though
It wasn't sarcasm to me , and no it is not 2560x1440. There is no 1440p. It doesn't exist as a standard. "p" is meaningless unless there is a contrasting "i" version, and it doesn't help anybody know what resolution you're talking about since you just dropped with width information.
I think newegg calls it 2k among irher things... which is techncially 2048x1080...It wasn't sarcasm to me , and no it is not 2560x1440. There is no 1440p. It doesn't exist as a standard. "p" is meaningless unless there is a contrasting "i" version, and it doesn't help anybody know what resolution you're talking about since you just dropped with width information. If you don't like writing out the numbers, you could call it QHD, which is a standard definition. Your "4K" TV is also likely not 4K, but UHD (though HDHD (hexadeca) or QQHD (quad quad) would make more sense). Marketing departments screw up everything for everyone, though