Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2006
- Messages
- 18,950 (2.85/day)
- Location
- Piteå
System Name | Black MC in Tokyo |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 5 5600 |
Motherboard | Asrock B450M-HDV |
Cooling | Be Quiet! Pure Rock 2 |
Memory | 2 x 16GB Kingston Fury 3400mhz |
Video Card(s) | XFX 6950XT Speedster MERC 319 |
Storage | Kingston A400 240GB | WD Black SN750 2TB |WD Blue 1TB x 2 | Toshiba P300 2TB | Seagate Expansion 8TB |
Display(s) | Samsung U32J590U 4K + BenQ GL2450HT 1080p |
Case | Fractal Design Define R4 |
Audio Device(s) | Line6 UX1 + some headphones, Nektar SE61 keyboard |
Power Supply | Corsair RM850x v3 |
Mouse | Logitech G602 |
Keyboard | Cherry MX Board 1.0 TKL Brown |
VR HMD | Acer Mixed Reality Headset |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | Rimworld 4K ready! |
Short question and I'm not friends with Google these days.
Three tiers, the basic one (among other differences) has something they call Standard Definition, and the middle one has "HD Avalaible". What is their definition of HD and doublew the fudge is Standard Definition? Is it as in old SDTV, and in that case, exactly which one?
In short, how hard is it supposed ti be to find out what resolution their stuff is available at?
Three tiers, the basic one (among other differences) has something they call Standard Definition, and the middle one has "HD Avalaible". What is their definition of HD and doublew the fudge is Standard Definition? Is it as in old SDTV, and in that case, exactly which one?
In short, how hard is it supposed ti be to find out what resolution their stuff is available at?