this post was submitted on 29 Jan 2024
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E-ink displays are opaque. The Kindles with illumination use side-lighting with a layer of plastic that guides the light across the surface of the device. They are effectively front-lit using LEDs situated around the perimeter of the screen.
The use of the term backlight is common, but even Amazon refers to it as a "front light" (it's edge-lit, of course, as you say). Bit like using a floppy disc as the "save" icon, or walling wireless networks "wi-fi" despite having nothing to to with "fidelity". We all know what it means.
Except for me, apparently. I'll have to update my vocabulary: backlight can mean front light.
I get it...it's hard to say something you know is incorrect, accuracy of language going to shit and other modern problems, and I feel that. I think of it as more of a "internal lighting that illuminates the device interface." In dealing with non-technical people on a daily basis, I find it's much more productive to allow/ignore this sort of colloquialism unless it's that specific thing I'm trying to fix/undo/explain. I barely even flinch now when people refer to the large box on their deck as the "CPU." ;-)
You seem fun to be around.