Maybe with the DisplayPort cable the screen will get much better. So, I will try with the DisplayPort cable (don't have a USB-C adapter for it, so will do that in a couple of days). I feel that after doing this the display has gotten better, as the icons are no longer blurred now even in the original resolution, but I am not really sure if it's really gotten better overall or not.Īlso, I think it may be due to the HDMI cable, I can only see 60Hz as the option in Refresh rate drop-down, can't go any higher. So, anyways I tried this solution ( ) which forces RGB in Mac M1 for external monitors. I was unable to find any place to see which color format the monitor was in from the OSD, if anyone knows how to figure it out, please let me know. I thought it was due to the fact that the Mac is forcing YPbPr color format to the monitor instead of RGB due to which it was not looking that great. Now this resolution is a compromise as it's not 2k, so I was looking for other options. However, at 2560 x 1440 HiDPI the text looked even worse, and after lowering resolution to 2048 x 1152 HiDPI, the screen looked much better. I tried the BetterDisplay 2 app and enabled their smooth scaling feature as well which then enabled scalable HiDPI resolution. I used HDMI-HDMI cable to connect to my Macbook Air M1, and I am using a dongle from Mokin to connect the HDMI cable (which claims to support up to am using the monitor as my main display and at its original resolution (2560 x 1440), the screen doesn't look bad from a distance of say 20 inches, but if I go closer, I can clearly see pixels and jagged edges.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |