Quote Originally Posted by Enfarious View Post
Yes the pixel count is fixed in all LCD devices, that's where the native resolution comes from. But like a laptop with a native resolution below 1080 can still be pushed to 1080 a TV can be pushed past it's native resolution.

The TV/Monitor/TVs floating around that I mentioned earlier aren't crazy expensive, well not when compared to other hardware out there.

The LED technology that is being referred to in most of those monitors and TVs alike are back-lighting, not true LED displays, it can be a little misleading, but it's not wrong. I'm assuming here when you say "real" LED you mean the massive screens like in times square and what have you.
Except you missed the point that the displays are physically incapable of displaying any higher resolution than the native. So "pushing" it higher gives you no better resolution since the panel itself cannot display that many pixels. It just can not happen that way. There is no way to make a TV that has a physical count of 2,073,600 pixels, show more than that, that's all that is there.

And no, by LED monitor, I mean OLED. Like the type found in some smartphones nowadays. They have desktop displays using the tech, just terribly expensive. But the big problem I see is that people let themselves be confused by it, so when real LED based displays start to become mainstream they will become even more confused.