Quote:
Originally Posted by DNSB
Some of the earlier eInk devices with lower resolution may have used anti-aliasing though it slowed down the display and would require a display capable of greyscaling. For later eInk screen, the 300 DPI screen keeps the jaggies small enough that anti-aliasing would not be useful.
Takes be back a lot of years. The first discussion on anti-aliasing and eInk I remember on MobileRead was from before I joined and was just browsing the site.
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Aha! So the earlier devices would be more likely to have anti-aliasing, and the newer ones generally don't use it?