To be honest by doing that you are making it look worse.I just crank everything up to the max,
The sharpness setting in the TV is the TV CPU figuring out where the edges of objects are and adding a contrast boost to those edges. It isn't any sharper, as in it isn't higher resolution, just to our eyes it appears sharper as we see a higher contrast as a defined edge therefore we are 'tricked' into seeing sharpness.I just crank everything up to the max, because my TV lacks HDR support and even though it’s 4K it always looks a little blurry unless I use maximum sharpness
I never considered slow or overloaded wireless networks to be bandwidth-limited coming from 56k days! Not even sure the bandwidth limited users would know what 56k is to heed the warning!I think it's a very low number, but of course, it's all relative...
Today's bandwidth-limited users are now more likely to be on slow or overloaded wireless networks. "56k warnings" are quaint, but in some ways, still useful!
That's a good point. It's all relative; image files and web pages have become a lot larger since the ancient times.I never considered slow or overloaded wireless networks to be bandwidth-limited coming from 56k days! Not even sure the bandwidth limited users would know what 56k is to heed the warning!