Solution
yes, it accepts that as INPUT, then it scales it to resolution that the TV supports, 1366x768
anything higher than 1366x768 will get scaled down.
In short, if it didn't do the scaling, at best you would see "unsupported resolution" when pluggin PC in as 1920x1080
in worst case, plain black screen.

Surajit195

Commendable
May 27, 2016
3
0
1,510

Thank you for responding.

Mainly for watching normal TV .
But sometimes i want to connect my laptop through HDMI for watching movies or play games.

Please check the full specification of both the LED TVs through link.
 

little_me

Estimable
May 9, 2015
151
3
4,910
Philips:
Maximum resolution: 1366 x 768p
supports input of 1920x1080 from computer at 60Hz but.. that is scaled down to that maximum resolution.
screen is refreshed at 240Hz though, reducing flickering.

Panasonic:
supports 1920x1080 right away.
Screen refresh is only 100Hz

If price is not an issue, I would go with Panasonic, HD (1366x768) is old standard.
 

Surajit195

Commendable
May 27, 2016
3
0
1,510
Okay thanks for your help.
But in Philips tv aslo Support maximum resolution upto 1920*1080(FHD)
Check in specification /Supposed Display Resolution/Computer formats (http://www.philips.co.in/c-p/32PFL5039_V7/5000-series-led-tv/specifications )
That's why I am confused.
 

little_me

Estimable
May 9, 2015
151
3
4,910
yes, it accepts that as INPUT, then it scales it to resolution that the TV supports, 1366x768
anything higher than 1366x768 will get scaled down.
In short, if it didn't do the scaling, at best you would see "unsupported resolution" when pluggin PC in as 1920x1080
in worst case, plain black screen.
 
Solution