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Hello Anon, it seems you may be looking at a driver conflict here. Setting up this project is easy; bring in a second monitor and prepare to swap between the two frequently.
1. On the Eizo's menu initiate the self calibration.
2. When the Eizo completes the self calibration and the Pixelation persists, uninstall all the Graphic Card drivers on your computer.
3. Install the manufacturer's specific graphics card drivers from the manufacturers website.
4. If the monitor continues to be pixelated then ensure that your GC is 4k ready. (That it can natively display 2560x1440 @ 16:9 aspect ratio).
I suspect your Graphics Card is not up to par, it likely has full 1080 but not enough to push 4k as your monitor natively runs. Purchase any GC with a 4k ready capacity and you will enjoy the full beauty of your purchase.
"The screen is a 15.6? diagonal widescreen TruBrite TFT display with a native resolution of 1366×768. This display is LED backlit and a 16:9 aspect ratio."
(Driving this display is the Mobile Intel HD graphics chip. It supports 64-1696MB of shared video memory. This is not the card to play video games with.")
From: http://www.bbspot.com/reviews/toshiba-satellite-l755-s5216-laptop-with-intel-pentium
You probably need to to turn your aspect ration on the TV down. Newer HD screens use a 16:9 aspect ratio for HD content which is a wide screen format. Standard definition TVs and programs use a 4:3 aspect ratio. Most flat screen TVs have an option to display in 4:3. This option is most often found in Menu/Setting>Video Options>Aspect Ratio. For standard definition programming you want 4:3, for HD you want 16:9.
Hello
Most of the telivision transmissions are comes at an aspect ratio of 4:3. Wide aspect ratio is 16:9. If you try to see a picture with aspect ratio 4:3 to wide 16:9, it will look like stretched. it is not the fault of the tv. Most DVD recording have the aspect ratio of 16:9 [Wide]. This aspect ratio will be displayed correctly when your tv is also set to wide mode. If you select normal mode at this condition, the picture will be displayed elongated. Ok Your Tv has no probelm.
The resolution is done at the PC video output setting, not at the monitor, you should set the PC video resolution to be at monitor native resolution: 1920 X 1200 @60Hz This will give the correct aspect ratio of your display.
Bottom line for the extra connectivity and DLNA certification i would go with the Bravia Z-Series KDL-40Z4100/B 40-Inch 1080pBecause if you connect this to your in home network you can stream music videos and music off you PC onto your TV without the need for extra wired or memory cards etc.
Otherwise if you don't need this feature the other options are identical on the other TV so it is just as good a choice.
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