I know this isn't really a question, but has there been any recent advancements or news about Resolution Independence in any of the major OSes? (Windows / Mac / Linux)
I'm quite interested in the whole idea and concept of it but recently it's been quite quiet on the whole topic.
Answer
Apple took great strides with allowing more RI in Leopard, but there is still a ton of fixed- and/or low-resolution bitmaps in various places. Windows 7 is the same way, leaps and bounds over its predecessor, but still hamstrung in various places.
For the clarification: Resolution Independence refers to an OS's ability to scale objects on the screen, so that if you're running a super-high resolution display, your icons and text don't continuously shrink. a 512x512 pixel image might be 2" across on a 20" display running at 1680x1050. On a 20" display running at 3360x2100 or more, the pixel density is such that that same 512x512 image would be the size of a postage stamp. It typically relies a lot on using vector-based text and graphics, rather than fixed-resolution bitmaps.
Until those high-density displays become available and more mainstream, or at least in the high-end / professional market, you won't see a big push for any of the OSes to finish their adaptations.
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