A YouTube creator has built a Game Boy emulator using a basic E-Ink screen and the ESP32 chipset, while achieving a suitable refresh rate.
Wenting Zhang successfully converted the M5Stack PaperS3 dev kit into a functioning Game Boy, though not without caveats.
E.Comis Technology, a subsidiary of E Ink Holdings Group, said it has scaled a self-developed, solvent-free optically clear ...
Introducing DASUNG Link - the revolutionary answer to digital eye fatigue. Whether you're glued to your smartphone or a ...
Tom's Hardware on MSN
Designer turns niche E-Ink dev board into a 60Hz Game Boy handheld
The hardware is discontinued and the experience isn't perfect, but the fact that the emulator exists at all is a true ...
XDA Developers on MSN
Someone made an e-ink ESP32 Game Boy, and it runs at a very playable 60Hz refresh rate
Another win for e-Ink enthusiasts.
The Onyx Boox Max Note is a stunning paper-like slate with plenty of versatility. But it's biggest win also spirals into its core weakness.
LG Display has revealed that its full lineup of large-sized OLED panels, including those used in the monitors and TVs of many ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
Amazon used to have just one Kindle Scribe. Soon it will have three, including a new color version that costs $630. Here are my early impressions. Executive Editor David Carnoy has been a leading ...
(Nanowerk Spotlight) Augmented-reality glasses and near-eye microdisplays need tightly packed light-emitting pixels. At that scale, a pattern can fail even when it looks correctly drawn. A narrow ...
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