Sorry - I have to come back on this ! It is not only the driver - it has also to do with the UI configuration !
If the scaling is set to 100% the Image is OK - but even with glasses you can not see anything because the font is too small for my Screen. If you set the scaling to 200% the Image is cut to half screen.
Triple boot Win10-Pro| Resolve Studio | Decklink 4K Extreme 12G | NVIDIA GTX1080 | INTEL ARC A770 | SSD-RAID | HDD-RAID | 20 logical cores | 2 x 10GbE | 64GB RAM | on 10GbE Media sharing NW | 10Gbps NAS | BMD Cloud Store 10Gbps
Hi Jim, I think the other way around, not the HW should adjust to the todays High DPI Capabilities.It is the SW to support 4K and even 8K Resolutions in todays editing. In this aspect Resolve is in my eyes somewhat anachronistic compared to other editing PGM's.
My editing Monitor is 28" which is big enough for my desk - together with a second one and a 40" preview Monitor.
Regards Juergen
Triple boot Win10-Pro| Resolve Studio | Decklink 4K Extreme 12G | NVIDIA GTX1080 | INTEL ARC A770 | SSD-RAID | HDD-RAID | 20 logical cores | 2 x 10GbE | 64GB RAM | on 10GbE Media sharing NW | 10Gbps NAS | BMD Cloud Store 10Gbps
I don't think High DPI is a valid concept. It's an unnecessary gimmick. The icons on the screen are fine as they are, so the only valid reason to get higher screen resolution is to get more screen real estate.
You defeat that purpose by setting Display Scaling above 100%.
28" is good for 1440 resolution. It's too small for 2160, though. I recommend at least 32" for 2160.
Or for older eyes, 32" at 1440 might serve well. (If anybody makes one.)
My Biases:
You NEED training. You NEED a desktop. You NEED a calibrated (non-computer) display.