In An Approximation to the Aliasing Effect, Part 1: The Origin I revisited some basic concepts about the aliasing effect, though I did it from a more visual than theoretical perspective. This second ...
Suppose you take a few measurements of a time-varying signal. Let’s say for concreteness that you have a microcontroller that reads some voltage 100 times per second. Collecting a bunch of data points ...
Previously on Digital Foundry we discussed how morphological anti-aliasing (MLAA) has evolved from a theory put together by Intel into a working technology for PlayStation 3, developed by Sony's ...
Anti-aliasing smooths the raw and haggard edges on digital type and images on computer and handheld displays, wireless phones, printers, even digital cameras. Aliasing – jagged or stair-stepped edges ...
So, you need a lowpass filter in your data-acquisition circuit. And you know it's not a good idea to implement this function after the ADC as a digital filter in your controller or processor. The best ...
Q: What is an anti-alias filter, and do I need one? A: At its simplest an anti-alias filter removes unwanted high-frequency signals from the signals you want to measure. Let's look at why you might ...
Aliasing can absolutely ruin your images, but it doesn't have to be that way. [Ed note: Some of the following technical illustrations will only display properly if your browser is set to show pictures ...
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