A monitor cannot be "overclocked." That concept does not even apply to monitors. The resolution depends on the physical number of pixels on the screen, not on any software manipulations.
A monitor cannot be "overclocked." That concept does not even apply to monitors.
Not in the traditional sense, but some monitors do allow the user to decrease the response time/increase the frame rate of the display (from, say, 60Hz to 85Hz). "Overclocking" is not the best term to describe it but that's the name that has stuck. Of course this has nothing to do with the number of pixels, which is obviously fixed.