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Portables (Apple) Technology

Goodbye and Good Riddance To the 16:9 Aspect Ratio (theverge.com) 232

One of the biggest trends coming out of this year's CES wasn't something people will necessarily notice at first glance unless they look closely. From a report: After enduring years of cramped, "widescreen" laptop displays, it looks like we're finally starting to say goodbye to the 16:9 aspect ratio. [...] The aspect ratios you'll typically see on laptops are 16:9, 3:2, 16:10 (which, for whatever reason, is called 16:10 rather than 8:5), and (occasionally) 4:3. 16:9 is the most common option and also the one with the lowest amount of vertical space relative to its horizontal space. [...] But this CES showed that 16:10 and 3:2 displays are inching closer to the mainstream. These are some of the biggest laptops announced at the show that are offering non-16:9 display options:

HP Elite Folio (1920 x 1280, 3:2)
Dell Latitude 9420 2-in-1 (2560 x 1600, 16:10)
Lenovo ThinkBook Plus Gen 2 (2560 x 1600, 16:10)
Lenovo Legion 7 and Legion 5 Pro (2560 x 1600, 16:10)
LG Gram 17 and Gram 16 (2650 x 1600, 16:10)
Lenovo IdeaPad 5 Pro (2560 x 1600, 16:10)
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Titanium Yoga (2256 x 1504, 3:2)
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 9 and X1 Yoga Gen 6 (up to 3840 x 2400, 16:10)
Lenovo ThinkPad X12 Detachable (1920 x 1280, 3:2)
Asus ROG Flow X13 (up to 3840 x 2400, 16:10)


That doesnâ(TM)t mean there are no 16:9 displays left â" plenty of laptops still use it, and probably will for the foreseeable future. And some of these devices, like the LG Grams, were 16:10 already. But it's significant that a large number of the flagships we'll be seeing in the first half of 2021 will be either 16:10 or 3:2. In fact, when you include MSI's 16:10 Summit E13 Flip and Razer's 16:10 Razer Book 13 (both of which were announced prior to CES), I can't think of a mainstream consumer laptop company that isn't now selling a non-16:9 flagship-level machine. It's clear that companies across the board are moving toward laptops with taller aspect ratios, and I fully expect to see more of them in the years to come.

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Goodbye and Good Riddance To the 16:9 Aspect Ratio

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  • by VoodooCryptologist ( 7614904 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:47PM (#60973876)
    I've always preferred 16:10 over 16:9 and most people seem to agree with me. This is a really welcome shift.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:51PM (#60973904)
      16:10 displays are twice as good as 8:5 displays! ;-) Still, I much prefer 32x20 or the new 64x40 displays, though!!! We can all agree that 4:2.5 displays are trash!
      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:08PM (#60974050)

        16:10 displays are twice as good as 8:5 displays! ;-) !

        That's an easy mistake to make but they're actually FOUR times as good because both arbitrary numbers are doubled!

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:51PM (#60973906)

      That's because you think this is about work and computer screens. 16:9 and the manufacture of displays has always largely been driven by the movie / television industry. The trend there is to push wider, not taller.

      I too prefer 16:10 screens.

      • by Tx ( 96709 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:08PM (#60974058) Journal

        I still have my old Dell Precision M90 from over a decade ago, with its 1920x1200 display (16:10), it was a much better aspect ratio for working on. It always annoyed me that there weren't more machines with squarer aspect ratios, especially in the more professional segments, so I hope this change lasts.

        • by kubajz ( 964091 )
          On my desktop, at least I put my taskbar along the side instead of the bottom of the screen. Makes the workspace less wide but taller... so I do get a squarer result.
      • Most films use a wider aspect ratio than 16:9 anyways so 16:9 isn't particularly good for anything beyond anything specifically made for it, such as television shows. If you really wanted the best experience for watching movies you'd probably be best off getting a projector so you're not stuck with a screen with a fixed ratio.
      • Here's the app I'm looking for... give me 16:9 news mixed with a personal ticker in the 10th area...

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      Can't say I disagree, especially on a laptop. On a big screen for coding I care less because with a sufficiently large 16:9 screen the columns get so long I don't want to fill out the whole thing. On a laptop though that's never the case.

      I mean I guess if you're apple and all you do is show attractive, polished people watching achingly cool films in desirable locations then the black bars are a real downer.

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:57PM (#60973956)

      Because it is a standard for TV, and having the same standard for both computer monitors and TVs allow for economies of scale. That's how we got so many cheap 1080p monitors.

      The TV standard was born as a compromise between film and video aspect ratio.

      • having the same standard for both computer monitors and TVs allow for economies of scale.

        Doesn't producing monitors and TVs of many different sizes squander that advantage?

        • having the same standard for both computer monitors and TVs allow for economies of scale.

          Doesn't producing monitors and TVs of many different sizes squander that advantage?

          It doesn't. You make a large panel in a given aspect ratio and you can cut it into multiple smaller panels, including of different sizes, in that same aspect ratio pretty easily. You can also easily get divisions of that aspect ratio. But something in a completely different aspect may be impossible without wasting some of the large panel.

    • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

      I was going to get outraged that my nice 16:9 aspect ratio was being taken away from me, but I've just done the calculation and found that the aspect ratio that I have and have always had and prefer to any other is actually 8:5.

      So yes, I say carry on.

    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      I wonder how much is due to the fact that 16:10 is the "standard" resolution that is closest to the Golden Mean

    • I've always preferred 16:10 over 16:9 and most people seem to agree with me. This is a really welcome shift.

      Well at least they aren't pushing glossy screens like they did 10 years ago.

  • by LenKagetsu ( 6196102 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:47PM (#60973878)

    Because people are idiots. [mentalfloss.com]

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:55PM (#60973944)

      False. Idiots (by formal definition) are the kind of dumb who can barely add. That said there's nothing about being an idiot or not which makes it instantly easier to compare a 16:9 vs 16:10 screen instead of changing both numbers and making people think.

      Why make people calculate when it's not necessary to do so. I spend my entire frigging day buried in numbers, the last thing I need is to waste braincells on division when comparing marketing material on documentation. It's the same reason you publish specifications which could be readily calculated from other specifications. It doesn't matter how high your IQ is, customers don't generally want to solve logic puzzles to buy products.

    • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:12PM (#60974082) Homepage

      How much more vertical space do you have for a 4:3 screen compared to 8:5 or 16:9?

      What about 16:12, 16:10 and 16:9?

      That's why we say 16:10 rather than 8:5, and why I'd allow 16:12 to replace 4:3.

      • Fixing one of the numbers obviously makes the comparison easier because it saves the necessity of any mental arithmetic, but aspect ratio isn't the same as resolution so we can't tell how much more vertical space we have from that information alone. You could very well have a 16:9 display (Say 1920 x 1080, or 1080p as it's more commonly described) that has more vertical pixels than a 16:12 display (1024 x 768, i.e., XGA).

        The only other downside is that it makes expressing certain aspect ratios like 5:4 (
        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          By similar argument, you also need to consider the screen or pixel size. Having a zillion pixels isn't helpful if each one is only a micron across.

          Speaking for my lazy self, I can more quickly understand the relative ratios between 9, 10 and 12 than between 1/1.77, 1/1.1.6 and 1/1.33.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      It's probably more that 16:10 is easily comparable to 16:9 without putting much thought into it. the 16:10 indicating that it is a taller screen. Not that many of the general public probably even know what is meant by aspect ratios and 4:3/16:9/16:10
    • I think they should denote all screens in 16:X ratios. AFAIK, everything we use is a power of two one the X axis, so it works out well. And if it helps other people, I can totally handle that all fractions aren't reduced.

    • It is because 16:9 is still common. So if you say pick form a 16:9 vs an 8:5 you will need to take the extra step to see the common number and multiply it by 2 to really see that 8:5 is taller than 16:9.

      Being that the 16:10 ratio has more pixels than 16:9 and it makes these screens a bit more expensive. Allowing a person who may need to make a snap decision to pick between the two is much easier if you can see a common number between them.

      Smart People don't always have the time to do crazy research in ever

    • Because people are idiots. [mentalfloss.com]

      In my kitchen sink I once found a 1 cup measuring cup and a 1/2 cup measuring cup. So I asked my wife if she had needed to measure 1.5 cups.

      Yes, she had.

      She's an elementary school teacher. She teaches fractions.

    • by Joviex ( 976416 )

      Because people are idiots. [mentalfloss.com]

      People are idiots cause they dont want to waste meat? Or eat less? or any other obtuse reason you seem to have skipped? Maybe it tasted like ass to some?

      Your selected preference does not make them idiots.

      • Um, the article pointed out that when questioned that many customers felt that 1/3 pound for the same cost as a 1/4 pound was a waste of money. Ie, they did not understand fractions. Or probably they understand the fractions if they stop and think about them, but most people just rely on gut feelings.

        So 16:10 feels bigger than 16:9, and yet without knowing the actual dimensions you can't say for sure. You could make a tiny laptop with 320x200 which indeed be tiny despite being 16:10 :-)

  • I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pele ( 151312 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @12:51PM (#60973910) Homepage

    What was wrong with 4:3 in the first place?

    • Sometime in the 2000s, manufacturers decided that laptops were "entertainment devices" and people needed widescreens for playing games and watching DVDs (some even came with remotes). Then tablets came along and now laptops are exclusively for work again.
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      4:3 (1.333) wastes a lot of vertical space when you try to view two pages side by side.

      In the same scenario, 3:2 (1.5) wastes horizontal space. So does 16:10 (1.6) and 16:9 (1.778).

      What we really need are monitors with a 1.414 aspect ratio [wikipedia.org]. Then you can view a single A3 sheet in landscape with no wasted space, or two A4 pages in portrait. But maybe that's just too practical.

      • The problem is most computer displays fit the image of a computer.
        A typewriter with a TV on top of it.
        Early home computers were actually hooked up to TV's to make it more affordable for the masses.
        After a while when graphics power allowed for 80 column text (needing around 640 pixel horizontal resolution) The TV was phased out for a dedicated computer monitor that can handle the higher phosphor count, without bleeding, which was still often just a Black and White TV, than the more expensive color displays.

    • by Rhipf ( 525263 )

      It didn't match Hollywood film production at the time HD standards were adopted.

    • by b0bby ( 201198 )

      One reason, other than just being more TV like, is that a 16:9 screen of a stated diagonal size is a smaller area than a "same size" 4:3, so a 15" laptop could be made cheaper with a widescreen.

    • For gaming, nothing. Professional CS:GO players still use it [prosettings.net]

      For watching movies you want to preserve the varying wide aspect ratios they use. Every director has his "pet aspect ratio" and equivalent film width.
      i.e. Movies displayed on IMAX use used 1.43:1, while most early US movies used 1.78:1 (16:9) or 1.85:1 but that has creeped up to 2.35:1 or 2.39:1. The 1927 movie Napoleon [wikipedia.org] used 4:1.

      /Oblg. The nice thing about standards is that there are so many to pick from!

      Here is a picture [ctfassets.net] showing the common aspe

    • LCD economies of scale. 4:3 worked really poorly for DVDs (which ended up using 16:9 for the widescreen versions.) It was cheaper to buy the same aspect ratio screens. Then, software started being designed to take advantage of it.

      TL;DR - 16:9 has economies of scale that 4:3 (16:12) does not.

    • What was wrong with 4:3 in the first place?

      The ancient Greeks thought it was he best - so modern people decided it was "Old Hat"

      In reality: Holywood invented "Wide Screen" to stop movies being watched on TV, so TV screens became "Wide screen" and the entire world was inconvenienced because Holywood are scum.

      • Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)

        by Sique ( 173459 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @02:48PM (#60974744) Homepage
        Wide screen started in the 1950ies, for instance Cinerama (1952) with 70 mm prints.

        TV was 4:3 first, because the first cathode ray tubes were round, and just had a rectangular screen mask, and 4:3 was close to the Academy format (35 mm prints), which most 35 mm cameras of the time used. Going further away from the 4:3 format would have been a waste of screen estate, as it is not easy to make cathode ray tubes whose screen differs too much from a circle (only in the late 1980ies, the first CRT screens with a wider aspect ratio than 4:3 appeared).

    • 16:9 is a more "natural" ratio; ie. it comes closer to how we see the world. This is useful if you wish to have an experience that fills your field of view as much as possible, like watching video or playing games.

      However, while this fits our field of vision for just looking at stuff, it is totally different from our optimal field of vision when reading. Text can very quickly become too wide to read comfortably (or write), and having more text displayed vertically helps when scanning through a big body of t

    • We humans seem to like objects that are expressions of the golden ratio (phi, about 1.618). 16:9 is closer to phi than 4:3 that's why they promoted it back in the day as more pleasing to the eye. 16:10 is even closer, It's strange why they didn't do that instead of 16:9.

    • by teg ( 97890 )

      What was wrong with 4:3 in the first place?

      Adding extra width to the monitors made it easier to work with multiple applications at the same time.

  • 16:9 screens are used because that's the ratio for HD TV, so there are a lot of them being made, driving the cost down other formats are going to be significantly more expensive as a result.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      That's sadly very true. My ideal center monitor is a 27" 1920x1200, last time I wanted to upgrade it, I found out that aspect ratio is so rare now, good monitors are seriously expensive. No, 16:9 does not give me enough vertical space for work at that diagonal, if it is a higher resolution & larger size 16:9 monitor it makes my vertical monitor to the left of it move too far away.
      You can get great quality monitors cheaply, as long as 16:9 is fine. At least that worked out for the vertical monitor, you g

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      16:9 screens are used because that's the ratio for HD TV, so there are a lot of them being made, driving the cost down

      other formats are going to be significantly more expensive as a result.

      It is. Apparently there is a connection to standard glass-pane sizes, cutting and amount wasted.

    • HD TV's aspect ratio is shit.

      Let's change that then!

      2.35:1 for movies. 1:2.35 for almost everything else. (Anything in list/text form.)

      What we really need, is a screen that can rotate as easily as a phone's.

  • It should say it's about laptops right in the headline. I came here outraged believing media companies are ditching 16:9 aspect ratio in media and replacing it with square or portrait.
    • I know it was rough reading those two whole sentences but congratulations.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      It should say it's about laptops right in the headline. I came here outraged believing media companies are ditching 16:9 aspect ratio in media and replacing it with square or portrait.

      It should. I am going to use 16:9 forever on my desktop, because it fits the comfortable part of my field of view nicely. I am also going to stick with FullHD for the foreseeable future. Same reason, works well. In the same spirit, I am going to use standard 80g/m^2 paper for writing on it unless something much better suited for the task comes along.

  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:00PM (#60973982)

    Now give me a 22" 4k display at a 16:10 ratio.

    • Is that a 22" laptop screen or just a 22" 4K monitor? In either case, I think that's a bit small for 4K, and that most people would end up using some kind of resolution scaling so that the end result is a sharper image, but no real additional screen real estate from the additional pixels. The PPI on such a screen would be pretty close to that of the displays Apple uses on their Macbook Pro and they don't even give users the option of running at the full native resolution because it makes it practically unus
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      I have seen (a long time ago) a 17" square 4096x4096 display. That one was really impressive. They had a finely printed street-map from "Falk Plan" on it 1:1 and it was perfectly clear. Not very usable though, the form-factor sucks.

  • The only reason 16:9 was adopted was because it's the aspect ratio of most movie-theater screens, which means almost all movies are shot for it. When HD television came out they picked the same aspect ratio so movies wouldn't need pan-and-scan editing for television, and then computer monitors picked up on it because they could get cheap panels in that aspect ratio.

    • Thats not quite true. 16:9 was selected for HD as a middle compromise between the more standard 4:3 television and the much wider ~2.35:1 35MM aspect often used. That way if they wanted to crop a film to 16:9, you weren't likely to lose much and if they wanted to show a film uncropped, black bars would be minimized in contrast to a 4:3 display. Meanwhile, 4:3 aspect tv shows would have giant bars on either side of the picture but such content would be slowly phased out entirely.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Actually, 16:9 is cheaper to manufacture because TV sets use the same form-factor and LCD glass panes are optimized for that. 16:10 gives you more waste.

      Today, it would probably have happened as you describe, but back then a lot more displays went into TV sets than into computer monitors.

    • The only reason 16:9 was adopted was because it's the aspect ratio of most movie-theater screens, which means almost all movies are shot for it.

      Sorry but what are you smoking? That is completely and obviously false.

      Go on Netflix right now on a 16:9 screen and start clicking on feature films. Virtually all of them will have letterboxing, because feature films are almost NEVER shot in 16:9.

      Films are more commonly shot in 1.85:1 and 2.39:1.

  • I had a 16:10 monitor for years (still do actually, I use it next to my 16:9) and lots of games have trouble with aspect ratio. They stretch a 16:9 display out which throws off mouse aiming.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. Another reason to go with 16:9.

    • Lots? I've only bumped into a handful of those, and PC Gaming Wiki usually has a workaround.

      • they just have slightly off mouse controls is all. It's not that your shots don't go where you point, it's that it's harder to do the pointing. It's not a problem on the big budget stuff (your Call of Duties and Overwatches and even Borderlands) but when you get into smaller game territory (think Doom 64 or Shadow Warrior) it's very noticeable.
  • Wide screen also means short screen. It's funny to call them short screen when the use case needs a tall screen.

    I have 1920x1200 monitors. I would never buy a 1920x1080 monitor. Glad they are going taller! (1920x1280).

    For software development I don't want 4x3 but taller than 16x9 is awesome.

    Movies are actually better going shorter than 16:9. 1.85:1 and 2.39:1 is better for movies. The reason is dialog among two actors can fit both on screen at once with a tighter headshot. To keep the x9 ratio ... th

  • I hate 16:9.

    Not only on portable devices but much more on desktop systems. Right now I am using four displays (28 Inch, HannSG 281A to Z, 16:10, 1920x1200) but I would always prefer 4:3 or 3:2. They are 12 years old, their video quality is mediocre but I will still not replace them at any time soon because there is pretty much only 16:9 available for sane prices. Lets say I want 27 Inch 16:10 then I have to pay three times more.... and there are nada 30 Inch screens with 4:3 or 3:2 display...

    Nope...

    I can w

    • Even if they started offering 4:3 again right now I don't think your specs are really economical at $1k. Just quickly browsing Amazon shows 16:9 displays in that ballpark, which would be cheaper given they are actually smaller screens for the same diagonal measurement, are already pushing past that budget.

      There are certainly cheaper examples but I'm assuming a certain quality level.

  • Kind of funny in a rundown of all kinds of laptops, not to mention that Apple has mostly stuck to 16:10 in laptops.

    An amusing thing I found searching for this information, is that one of the top results on Google is Why doesn't Apple make a 16:9 aspect ratio MacBook [reddit.com]. I guess now we know, 16:9 was just too wide.

  • Why, for a few years in the '00s, was it that LCD displays were often a 5:4 aspect ratio (and typically 1280x1024 resolution)? The very first LCD monitor I bought in 2004, a Dell Ultrasharp, had a 5:4 aspect ratio. I realize that this was at a time when 4:3 was on its way out and HD's 16:9 was just emerging. Was 5:4 an optimal ratio for manufacturers back then?
  • by KalvinB ( 205500 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:28PM (#60974204) Homepage

    If people think their monitor is squished because it's 16:9 then the issue is not using it properly.

    The purpose of a wide screen monitor is to have more space for more windows. You can have two browser windows side by side. It helped mitigate the need for multiple monitors.

    I blame Mac OS for the confusion with the really dumb idea to put the main tool bar at the top of the monitor. It's clearly designed for people who live in exactly one app and one full screen window for work.

    For people who don't maximize applications and move them around side by side and above and below each other, we don't care what the ratio is, we care how many pixels there are.

  • If you have brain cycles to waste on decrying the aspect ratio of your monitor, you should be working harder. There is very little that is of less consequence. Maybe the exact shade of lipstick you're not going to wear.
  • by bustinbrains ( 6800166 ) on Thursday January 21, 2021 @01:32PM (#60974254)

    I don't like it when laptops have a different screen ratio from everything else. 1080p makes the most sense for communicating across a wide range of devices. What happens when you plug a 16:9, 1080p display into a 16:9, 1080p projector? A perfect screen reproduction on the wall for conference rooms and classrooms and the like. Also, if the laptop screen resolution is not the exact same as any attached monitors and the laptop loses sync with the monitor for even a moment, all the windows will have been resized when the monitor resyncs again. But if every monitor is the same aspect ratio and resolution, the windows just move around to the primary monitor. Resizing windows repeatedly is a huge time sink. Moving windows back to where they were at is annoying but not as bad.

    In short, I was quite fine with 16:9.

    Laptop keyboards, on the other hand, are a much bigger problem. The arrow keys are shoved below the shift key and given half-height. The F1-F12 keys are inexplicably half-height and/or require finger dancing Fn + F1-F12 key to press. Home, End, PgUp, PgDown, and Delete keys are basically useless. There's no right-Ctrl key on most laptop keyboards. It's almost like laptop manufacturers asked the question, "Which important keys do users need to press to efficiently use this device?" and then decided to make a keyboard that makes it as difficult as possible to press those keys. And there's no excuse for half-height keys when there's about 6 inches of open space on the top and bottom of the keyboard region. Laptop keyboards basically render a laptop useless: Navigation is cumbersome, typing is cumbersome, editing is cumbersome, debugging is cumbersome, etc.

  • Now we will have to change all our Powerpoint masters to another ratio. We finally got everyone to stop using the 4:3 ones, and standardized on 16:9. It will takes us another decade to catch up again.
  • I recently tried to find some not-too-large desktop monitors for use on a desk that's space-constrained (have to be able to see over the monitors). Large retailers don't stock any below 21". NewEgg has a few smaller ones (15-17") at 3-4x the price of a 21"...

  • Let's be consistent and keep numbers in the same scale, so we have 16:9, 16:10, and 15:10. But we're not going to be seeing 12:9 again anytime soon (4:3).

  • I've been using the Dell U3415w for the past few years running 21:9 aspect ratio and I'm still loving it until today. However, on my next acquisition I'm definitely gonna go with the 4K 32:10 aspect ratio. I'm never going to buy 5K/8K monitors because I don't think they are worth the price. My eyes won't be able to distinguish anything better than 4K.
  • I remember when the Macbooks first came out with the 1366x768 screens and people at the Dell forums were drooling over it and I remember asking them if they don't realize that Dell makes 15" laptops that are 1600x1200 so the entirety of the Macbook screen could fit inside of it with lots of room to spare. But they were still griping about why Dell didn't have a screen like that.
  • For some people (including me) a lot of laptop use time is in airliner seats where there is a tight height requirement set by seat spacing. This makes short / wide formats better
  • Honestly, it doesn't make a lot of difference between 16:9 and 16:10. I'd prefer if they chose an aspect ratio and use it everywhere instead of having tons of similar (but not equal) ratios. 4:3, 3:2, 16:9 and 2:1 should be enough different ratios for all tastes. I don't think we need 16:10 as well.

    You need more vertical space? Then buy a 16:9 monitor that can be turned to portrait mode and stop whining.

    I prefer to have the same aspect ratio because it makes it better to use the clone mode when using two mo

  • I have seen people moaning about the general 18:9 phone resolutions. Mainly that they have black bars again and their prefered media player will not let them disfigure the vidieo to avoid it.

    Same old.

  • If the laptop is smaller than 14 inches, 3:2 is the best.
    With 16:9 you donâ(TM)t have enough vertical room when youâ(TM)re dealing with a 13 inch display.

  • Is this those morons again, typing long columns of data into an Excel sheet instead of a fucking database?

  • One screen on the outside, one screen on the inside, use as a tablet when closed, but when opened up, the outside screen can be opened up too so it sits on top of the lower one. Giving you proper screen space for anything list based, like websites, file management, databases/tables and writing coding, so the majority of tasks.

    And why in the world does the keyboard not pop out to the sides, so the distance between tab and enter is actually the distance between your two pinkies when your arms don't grow out o

  • When you refer to a 15 inch or 17 inch screen, you are referring to the measurement from diagonal corner to corner, i.e. the longest straight line you can measure in a rectangle. However the area of two 15 inch screens with different aspect ratios is different.

    A 16:9 15 inch screen is slightly smaller than a 16:10 15 inch screen, which is smaller again than a 3:2 15 inch screen. So a 16:9 aspect ration allows the manufacturer to sell a slightly smaller (and therefore slightly cheaper) screen but put exac

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