Anyone using one 4K TV/monitor for both television and software development?

7 points by fasdf ↗ HN
My wife and I (both software developers) live in a small apartment and we'd like to upgrade our ten-year-old TV. I've been thinking that I might like to get a large 4K monitor for software development on a MacBook Pro and Dell 15. (currently use a 27 inch iMac). I'm wondering if I can kill two birds with one stone by buying something like a 55 inch 4K TV and use it for both software development and watching movies.

The questions I have are:

* Which device? Must take both a DisplayPort signal for the 4K 60Hz but also have enough HDMI ports for the Apple TV etc. (or I could use an HDMI switcher)

* How to arrange seating? We'd like a couch for watching TV but a chair and tabletop for software development.

* Any hardware issues with the laptops I should be aware of?

4 comments

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You probably want to go bigger if you want to code from the couch. I have a computer hooked up to a 56in 1080p TV in my living room for games. If I am browsing the web I normally zoom in quite a bit in order to read things easily. My couch is fairly close to the TV ~5ft away.
I have been using 55" 4K as a monitor and for netflix/movies/games. Works great. Good luck finding one that has a display port input though. For software dev a display port to hdmi adapter at 30hz works fine.

I am thinking about getting an actual 4K monitor with display port inputs though. Mostly because I want fast turn on times, intelligent on/off detection, and better color.

My TVs are several years old.

To code on a 4k screen you will have to be within 4ft of it. Even at 55".

Depends on your eyesight. I find reading text on the TV difficult. So I tend to edit code, read articles on the MBP and browse web sites using the TV. When working from table and chair, I tend not to use the TV. Working from the couch is good, but the cable tends to get in the way to the other occupants. I have tried ChromeCast, but it is too laggy for my taste - so I tend to only use it for YouTube, etc.

I use a 4 port HDMI switcher. The signal quality is OK, but the dinky remote control is a bit of a pain.

There would not be a cable -- I would be using a wireless keyboard and mouse.