VGA text mode
VGA or video graphics array text mode, is a form of digital text created in April 1987 by IBM with 16 available colors in its palette, and also includes support for its older counterparts which were CGA and EGA, but also it has a minimum required resolution of 40x25 rows or 360 by 400 pixels, but however its standard resolution is at a way higher quality at 80x25 rows or 720x400 pixels, but many concerns are that newer monitors can stretch the text out effectively making it blurry but still normal size which makes it harder to see, and this is a very prevalent problem for users of VGA text mode, but moving from it is about the character map which is in the bios loaded onto the VRAM for customizing by the OS, and another thing about VGA text mode is it fonts sets which contains up to eight customizable font sets that’s are 8x8 in size or larger, more things about VGA text mode is its fast rendering speeds even for old computers, and this concludes my simple explanation on VGA text mode.