Good morning, I am in the market for replacing my fairly generic Philips 60hz 1440p IPS office monitor that I have used since 2017, it has issues with image retention and I want to upgrade to a higher refresh rate and move to a dual monitor setup.
I am currently decided on getting one or two monitors of either of these models.
But I have a few questions...
First a bit of an unusual requirenment, I need a monitor with an audio out, I seem to have borked my onboard audio on my computer, I get nothing when connecting my amp directly to my motherboard, it worked fine for a day or two after I built the system, but when I wanted to upgrade my cable, it just never worked, for a few days I used the front headphone jack, but the cable got caught in my chair and pulled the computer case over when it was running, it also yanked one ring out of thw 3.5mm jack.
So I have no on board audio I can use, this means that I send my audio through the display port cable and out through the audio out of the monitor to my amp, this works great, but poses some questions that I will get to.
At the moment, I am looking at getting one DE and one D, connecting them with a DP cable so I can easily switch between my desktop and my work laptop.
This means that I'll mostly be relying on MST from my desktop to my secondary monitor.
I will only game on my primary monitor, the other will either be off or show my desktop/chat, how would that affect gaming?
Sucks about onboard audio dying; hate when things like this happen on a new build.
Unfortunately I can't make recommendation on your proposed setup, but as an alternative, have you considered getting soundcard as an alternative? The basic ones are ~$20 where I live.
I have thought about it in the past, the thing is, I hate extra software running in the background, and since Logitech broke my trust when they pushed Logitech Download Assistant through Windows Update, I have been very weary of new hardware that I have not confirmed will do the same.
To clarify, I don't actually mind it too much, but it absolutely can't be forcibly installed just because I plug a device into my computer.
I have spares of my favourite mouse, keyboard and microphone, they are all excellent and don't need anything more than a driver.
I have been looking to replace my amp (a cheap chinese no name brand) with a Denon mini system that can easily power my speakers, and has an optical connection.
Are you sure that a soundcard needs weird software to work? With just the drivers you should just have working sound output via the soundcard ports. I could be wrong as I haven't had a soundcard in a very long time.
Could be annoying, but you may be able to only install the drivers and avoid the bloatware. I do that with Nvidia, I only have the drivers, not Geforce experience or whatever.