Color E Ink is blowing my mind right now

I remember when the first Kindle debuted. “It looks just like paper,” they said, and I didn’t believe it until I finally got my hands on one several years later. Since then, E Ink has evolved into an entire display category that covers the gamut of devices, from smartphones to tablets, smartwatches, monitors, and even full-fledged PCs.

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But, unlike its early iterations, E Ink doesn’t have to be just black and white. Like real ink, E Ink now comes in a variety of styles that allow up to 4096 colors to be displayed, giving you a sort of muted, pastel palette. E Ink provides a contrast level that’s similar to OLED when the frontlight is off, giving you literal inky blacks in the darkest parts of the image.

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