Try 144 or 165 if you have it. It’s some sort of matching game rather than hardware compatibility.
Try 144 or 165 if you have it. It’s some sort of matching game rather than hardware compatibility.
What is your resolution and refresh rate set to? MacOS can be quite picky.
I use four monitors for my WFH setup with a total of 11.8m pixels. Three 6k monitors is 37.3m pixels, more than three times what I’ve got. I’d be seriously considering this if I could run all four, but for now the hackintosh lives on.
A volleyball, like others have said. Wilson is a basketball manufacturer. Just got your wires a bit crossed.
I’m still confused. All the HDR processing should be done on the client side if it is an HDR capable display playing a compatible format. The Shield can play most formats so that shouldn’t be the issue. How do you know HDR isn’t displaying properly?
Tone mapping is for converting HDR content to SDR for non-HDR displays. Why do you need it for an HDR TV?
I had a professor who wanted at least five pages and wouldn’t read any more than eight. If you turn in more than eight, he reads the first eight and that’s it.
I’m playing Jedi: Survivor on story mode right now and this is exactly how I feel. It’s a shame because even on story mode, boss fights in Fallen Order were still a little challenging.
"To start, we’re offering each Premium individual, as well as plan managers for Family and Duo accounts, 15 hours of listening per month—giving them the ability to enjoy as many titles as they want within that monthly allocation.
[…]
For those super audiophiles who use up their 15 hours before their monthly billing cycles refresh, you can purchase a 10-hour top-up to finish that series. Not sure how many hours you have left? Check it at any time in your in-app settings. "
No cost listed on how much the top-ups are.
Thanks for trying. I’m unfortunately out of ideas.