Splitpin wrote:...the standard 1920 by whatever it is ?
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1920x1080, which is what is normally referred to as 1080p. Before then the 'standard' was 720p, and before that was 480. There are in fact other resolutions available, but there are good reasons for sticking with the industry-standards.
By the way, a LCD monitor has a 'native' resolution, where 1 pixel = 1 actual LCD 'light'. Back in the old days, CRTs had variable resolutions, but with LCDs it is always going to be best to set the display to the native resolution. Setting your resolution to anything greater isn't going to work, as there is a fixed number of pixels on your monitor, and you'll lose any benefit of a higher resolution.
These days there's a shift to 4K, which is sometimes called 2160p, which is twice 1080. One day most of us will have 4k monitors, as the industry has been pretty keen to get on with it. If you wanted a much bigger monitor, then 4K would make sense. Personally I'm waiting for 4K OLEDs to go mainstream, and become a reasonable price.