![]() ![]() I could choose to set its display to 2560×1600 that’s not the resolution that looks like half that, which is the default, but a resolution that actually uses using every pixel of the display. For example, in the screenshot below, you can see the options available on my 12-inch MacBook. This utility lets you quickly switch resolutions without going to System Preferences, but also lets you choose from non-Retina resolutions. Maybe you want even more choice in the resolution of your display. Resolutionator offers a wider range of resolutions, and also lets you switch quickly from the menu bar, or using a keyboard shortcut. Select the display in the preference pane’s popup menu, then hold down the Option key and click the Scaled button to see your options. If you have a second display connected to your Mac, you can choose a resolution for that display, also from the Displays pane of System Preferences. Naturally, these laptops offer other scaled options each lets you choose from a total of four resolutions, from 1024×640 to 1440 900 (12-inch MacBook) or 1680×1050 (13-inch MacBook Pro). So it looks like the same number of pixels, but on a display that’s one inch smaller diagonally. Its display has a resolution of 2304×1440, but the default “looks like” resolution it uses is not half that, but a bit more: 1280 x 800, just like the 13-inch MacBook Pro. Things are a bit different with Apple’s 12-inch Retina MacBook. The 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro has a native resolution of 2560×1600 and uses a default “looks like” resolution of 1280×800. ![]()
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