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  1. That article is about sensitivity, not resolution. You could not tell whether it was one candle 10 miles away, a binary star 10 light years away, or a galaxy 10,000,000 light years away.
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  2. Member Bernix's Avatar
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    I know it is not about resolution, but interesting about sensitivity. I know, that eye capabilities are limited, as well as brain capabilities. And also know, that line that has on computer white background and is black (line) say 10 degrees there you can nicely see pixels on usual 1920x1080 resolution, but increase color to say 256 aply antialiasing and pixels that were obvious gone. So it is somehow in relation resolution + ability of recognize number of colors (which is also different in each person).

    Story One friends girlfriend told him, that is nice writing there.
    Where?
    At the fence. (wooden thing around something)
    Where is the fence?
    There at the building!
    Where is building???
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  3. Resolution is not a problem - assuming twice higher resolution than highest fovea resolution (or rather pixel density) and video will be perceived as continuous without discrete structure.
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  4. Suppose we are going to have 8k or more resolution available, not sure if 4k is enough for this,
    reproduction of video on screen would need to be dynamic. Device would need to know exactly where we are looking at, and dynamically change focus (resolution) to that part if our eyes rest on that spot for a while, even letting it blur a bit elsewhere following some function outwardly. But anyway these are the actions that are difficult to tune up , if something is off, lots of folks would start to throw up watching a video. And it is going to be different from person to person.
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