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ErikHuisman | 3 years ago

Why are people doing this 30+ years to late? Imagine having this as kids.

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Yhippa|3 years ago

Yep! I remember doing this on the HP 48G's in the mid-90's: https://www.hpcalc.org/hp48/graphics/grayscale/

mmastrac|3 years ago

I only ever got four colors to display reliably on my HP48, mostly through naive bank switching/mapping of GROB data.

Grustaf|3 years ago

I remember those! PSA: there's a HP48G emulator for iphone, I use it almost every day...

ChuckNorris89|3 years ago

The computational and engineering effort for these hacks to get to those results in production would have made those price sensitive consumer gadgets far more expensive. It just wasn't economically feasible.

Also, if I'm not mistaken, those hacks look good on static images but could produce nasty artifacts on moving images.

roywiggins|3 years ago

TI-83+ calculators were doing grayscale like this 20 years ago, so a lot of people did have this as kids. It was a bit flickery but worked well.

DSMan195276|3 years ago

They actually gave an example that was, the Gameboy. I think in that case the big issue for going beyond just 4 gray levels is RAM and ROM space, and also potentially the speed of the PPU and display driver in dealing with the extra data.

saboot|3 years ago

I'm trying to think of examples that used it on the gameboy.

The Gameboy Camera obviously did, any games though?

cameldrv|3 years ago

We were! When I was a kid 28 years ago I had an HP48 calculator that people used the same techniques with for some games and such.

dragontamer|3 years ago

There's a ton of monochrome screens available to EEs under $20, even under $10.

This is still quite relevant.