(1) Smoothing a distorted communications signal by applying techniques that add data or filter out unwanted noise. (2) Smoothing the jagged appearance of diagonal lines in a bitmapped image. The ...
If you've ever played a video game on your PC, you've probably seen a setting called "anti-aliasing", which smooths out jagged graphics. But there are different types of anti-aliasing, and some are ...
1 - Displays 2 - Anti-Aliasing 3 - Super-sampling and Multi-sampling 4 - Anisotropic Filtering 5 - Example: Half-Life 2 6 - Conclusions Next Anti-Aliasing and Anisotropic Filtering, or AA and AF, are ...
Anti-aliasing is one of the most common graphics settings in PC games, but it’s rarely explained in a way that actually helps you decide what to use. At its core, anti-aliasing (AA) is a rendering ...
In first generation VR headsets like the Rift and Vive, this is perhaps the most noticeable. Technically the result of a display with a low ‘fill factor’, the Screen Door Effect (sometimes abbreviated ...
The Jaggies Ever since the launch of PlayStation 2 in Japan on March 4, 2000, the most talked about feature of the system has been its ability to do anti-aliasing, or more specifically, the lack of it ...
Suppose you take a few measurements of a time-varying signal. Let’s say for concreteness that you have a microcontroller that reads some voltage 100 times per second. Collecting a bunch of data points ...
Anti-aliasing smooths the raw and haggard edges on digital type and images on computer and handheld displays, wireless phones, printers, even digital cameras. Aliasing – jagged or stair-stepped edges ...