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From: | Max Nikulin |
Subject: | Re: [off-topic] E-readers and Org-Mode |
Date: | Fri, 28 Oct 2022 00:20:46 +0700 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:102.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/102.2.2 |
On 25/10/2022 23:59, Ken Mankoff wrote:
See also Dasung NotEReader. Full Android tablet, no lockdown like the ReMarkable. Looks fast - can watch YouTube videos for example. If it's really full Android, then it should be able to install and run emacs natively. 10.3 or 7.8 inch versions.
I see that definitely it is possible, but I am unsure it is more convenient than OLED or LCD tablet. 4 regimes for screen is an indicator of some complications. Choice of Android may be a way to avoid development of custom UI. I have not checked if it is possible to build custom Android variant, unlock bootloader and still get comparable performance.
Where was a period when LCD monitors were slow in comparison to CRT ones and people complained concerning annoying trails on dynamic images...
On Tue, Oct 25, 2022, 08:27 Fraga, Eric wrote: On Tuesday, 25 Oct 2022 at 21:37, Max Nikulin wrote: > E-ink displays are slow (my device was manufactured 15 years ago
..
E-ink displays are getting significantly faster, with some claiming 60 Hz refresh rates (cf. the PineNote). Often, however, they are tied to low power and low performance processors given their use case: mostly reading with some annotations.
There is no reason to install high performance CPU if the goal is to get time between battery charging noticeably longer that for regular gadgets. Highest refresh rate means 5W power consumption in the case of PineNote.
It is not apparent for not-ereader, but I see the same black and back flickering magic to fight with ghosts and to achieve uniform background with high contrast on remarkable. My impression is that change in time to pass whole cycle is not dramatic. Likely long enough pause is necessary to let particles orientation to settle.
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