![]() It’s text output is smoother, with just couple test O’s getting a tiiiny bit of angles in them. Note 9 had less random errors (almost none), but surprise, diagonals revealed it also does systematic small errors, of about the same magnitude as Onyx (or maybe less, smaller pixels after all, could make it look worse than it is). ![]() (Vertical/horizontal lines look really straight, no small wobbles, but the calibration errors make such lines to have slight angling compared to the ruler’s position, and could also make slightly curved lines, if the calibration errors happen to be just that way over of the line’s path.) same shift every time at the same spot), way more than a pixel worth. various angled/diagonal lines) also shows systematic small shifts (i.e. When drawing other than horizontal or vertical lines (i.e. Onyx has a little bit of random jitter (really little, apparently well below pixel average “noise”) for me, that was expected, though it could be filtered out. For some reason, the wiggles seemed to be on the same spot on each nearby lines on the first tries, also note Note9, but now with more tries on Onyx, I don’t really see matching wiggles, except possibly within back-and-forth strokes along ruler.) I had to even find another ruler, just in case the first one wasn’t as straight as I thought, but no change. Whatever the reason is, the closer to 45 degree angle a line is, the worse it looks. ![]() (EDIT: I made way more lines… I’ll retract the stuff about systematic (calibration based) errors on diagonals, call it a brainfart if that was the reason, such errors should also happen on horizontal/vertical lines. Using Galaxy pens on Onyx didn’t give any different in accuracy for me. Of course, both Galaxy’s have insanely higher DPI displays, so they don’t need to care about anti-aliasing. Straight lines only reveal tracking error, not how well it smooths lines (obviously, some wobbles need to be left, otherwise everything would result in just line segments :P). That doesn’t explain it all obviously the other device gives smoother curves (whether by better tracking, or applied smoothing, or both…) I got interested about it, and compared my Note Pro, Galaxy Note 9 and Note 10, by drawing straight lines with a ruler. Seems Note pro doesn’t do any antialiasing, so the pixel “steps” can be seen easier. The new letters will not get the right location relative to the existing text…Īt least on the older example photos, it seems that part of the better look can be explained simply by slightly higher DPI display and text anti-aliasing. I also mentioned in another topic about the calibration inaccuracy, which is one thing, and doesn’t affect the smoothness of writing (or lines etc.), but that inaccuracy makes it sometimes near impossible to erase part of text and continue.
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