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Windows 10 Display Scaling

1,266 bytes added, 00:17, 17 December 2023
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This is truly a miserably broken and problematic feature of Windows 10, especially for users of software such as Global Protect or other similar software.   This is truly a miserably broken and problematic feature of Windows 10, especially for users of software such as [[Global Protect]] or other similar software.   It applies to people running dual monitors.  It specifically impacts people that run dual monitors that are physically different sizes, or people using a laptop and extended display option onto a physically larger monitor.  It can impact people with one physically small monitor (like a netbook display), and a desktop LCD monitor that both have the same native display resolution.   It applies to people running [[dual monitors]].  It specifically impacts people that run dual monitors that are physically different sizes, or people using a laptop and extended display option onto a physically larger monitor.  It can impact people with one physically small monitor (like a netbook display), and a desktop LCD monitor that both have the same native display resolution.   A moron named Kevin Arrows claims there is a global workaround, however he fails to comprehend the meaning of global.  If you read through his suggestion he claims that you can "[https://appuals.com/disable-display-scaling-on-high-dpi-devices-in-windows-10/ disable display scaling on high DPI in Windows 10 for all programs]" but his solution requires a per-application action and therefore is still cumbersome and misleading.A moron named Kevin Arrows claims there is a global workaround, however he fails to comprehend the meaning of global.  If you read through his suggestion he claims that you can "[https://appuals.com/disable-display-scaling-on-high-dpi-devices-in-windows-10/ disable display scaling on high DPI in Windows 10 for all programs]" but his solution requires a per-application action and therefore is still cumbersome and misleading. If you have to do this for each application then it is not a global fix and provides no greater advantage than the method described by Microsoft.  * Broken DPI Scaling on Mixed Resolutions * Broken DPI Scaling on Identical Resolutions of different physically sized monitors* Broken DPI Scaling on Laptop to Desktop Display spanningThe mouse cursor is not aligned with the active object being clicked.  Mouse alignment or calibration wrong with dual displays.  Mouse cursor off.Windows 10 scaling default above 100% causing problems clicking applications or navigating web sites.Settings custom scaling level -#Click on Start Menu > Settings > Display#On Display screen scroll all the way bottom and find “Advanced Display Settings” click on that#On Advanced display settings screen scroll all the way bottom and find “Advanced sizing of text and other items” click on that#Click on “Set custom scaling level” and make sure its set to 100%#Click ok and Apply changes if you changed anything on that screen. #Additionally, Right-click on desktop and select Display settings#Adjust slider labeled "change the size of text, app, and other items" to 100%[[Category:Computer_Technology]][[Category:Microsoft]][[Category:Windows]]
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