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If you look at the specs of the latest models of lots of different laptops, specifically, those built around the integrated graphics of the 22nm "tick" Ivy Bridge or even 22nm "tock" Haswell — the latest and greatest generation of Intel processors as of mid-2014 — the manufacturers still say that they only support 2560x1600 as the maximum resolution.
For example, the mid-2013 and early-2014 MacBook Air 11" and 13" are all powered by Haswell and Intel HD Graphics 5000 — pretty much the latest and greatest — yet their specs merely lists:
Simultaneously supports full native resolution on the built-in display and up to 2560 by 1600 pixels on an external display, both at millions of colors
Same for ThinkPad X230 with, for example, Ivy Bridge Intel Core i5-3320M and Intel HD Graphics 4000, with a mini-DisplayPort output, as per tabook.pdf:
Maximum external resolution: 2560x1600@60Hz (DisplayPort via optional Mini DP cable);
Also, the latest and greatest 199 USD Haswell netbook — Acer C720 with Intel Celeron 2955U — simply no mention of any external resolution at all, has an HDMI port.
Do any or all of these and/or other Ivy Bridge and Haswell laptops support 3840x2160 @ 30Hz like what's needed to drive Seiki 39" SE39UY04 at its native resolution, or do none of them really do just as advertised?
@Ramhound, how do you know? – cnst – 2014-07-02T22:17:38.583
Because the external resolutions are advertised and the HD Grahpics does not have the capability for 4k resolution of you any 4k go with something with a dedicated GPU from AMD or Nvidia – Ramhound – 2014-07-02T22:19:03.637
http://www.anandtech.com/show/7007/intels-haswell-an-htpc-perspective – cnst – 2014-07-02T23:03:31.320
http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1681560 – cnst – 2014-07-03T01:47:47.310