There's not much of a fix for this. You can tell the app not to use the DPI scaling functions on high-resolution screens, but that's actually only going to make it look smaller, not larger. Or it may have no change at all if the program isn't respecting DPI scaling in the first place. There's a lot of reasons why this happens, and is, but it's quite likely that there's not much else you can do until/unless the app is written to understand a screen with more pixels-per-inch than 96. Shawn 'Cmdr' Keene| Microsoft MVP - Windows Insider| CmdrKeene.com| tweet me: @LtCmdrKeene Microsoft MVPs are independent experts offering real-world answers. It follows the story of Peter Parker, a young boy who's father and mother were mysteriously killed. Please Subscribe for more Part 1: Lost Cause Now Watching Part 2: INTRACTABLE (Spin Off) Part 3: Incredible Spider-Man Short) In works Part 4: Secret Project: In works Part 5: Spider-Man 2: Another World Trailer - FREE DOWNLOAD Torrent: Commentary and Behind the Scenes: Sequel and Bloopers: The film takes direct inspiration from Sam Raimi's and Marc Webb's Spider-Man films, aswell as us placing our own twist on it. He grows up with his Uncle Ben and his Aunt May, as he tries to uncover the truths of his parents death. ► We are now planning 3 more different Films to tie into this Universe. Ultimate spider man sub indo. Learn more at mvp.microsoft.com. It would probably be the same. The smaller resolution you make the VM, the smaller that VM's window area would be on your screen, and any program inside it would just stay at the same size. I think the trick would be to enlarge or magnify it somehow (either the VM window or the program that's showing up so tiny directly). So I say no benefit from VM. Changing your own local resolution (and hoping your monitor stretches a smaller sample instead of just putting a black empty border around the image) is an option. A terrible one, but it works. You've probably already observed that 3 different things can happy when you take a program and put it on a high-DPI monitor (either by dragging, or using a HD monitor as your only screen): • The program enlarges, reflows content seamlessly with no blurring or tearing. Windows Universal Platform aka 'store apps' can do this. • The program enlarges, but is scaled by the desktop window manager (DWM aka 'Windows Aero' engine). The program isn't aware of it, it continues sending the same pixel size to the graphics system, which then enlarges that bitmap image by a scale and displays it. From Chrome to Notepad, this is the most common complaint about DPI scaling. If you want, you can adjust the program's compatibility mode to disable scaling and it will appear small on the screen, and have icons that are hard to touch. • The program doesn't even enlarge at all. Even without compatibility mode, the program presents itself in an almost unusably small form. What would be interesting, and I wish I knew who would even know how to check, would be to selectively set a magnification on a per-window basis. Really it seems like DWM model should make that a synch. Even iPad Retina had this problem, and for a while all you could do was hit the 2X button to blow up the app to fit the screen (making it blurry at the same time). But on the iPad, developers actually updated their apps eventually. Apple probably won't even let you build one without it now (just like Windows store). Shawn 'Cmdr' Keene| Microsoft MVP - Windows Insider| CmdrKeene.com| tweet me: @LtCmdrKeene Microsoft MVPs are independent experts offering real-world answers. Learn more at mvp.microsoft.com.
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