Well, I dunno. I kinda think that's one-a-dem laws which don't translate into reality like the physics equations that say it's impossible for bumblebees to fly.
Let's look and use our own powers of observation:
So I printed a
photograph to an "L" sized print on my brand new
MX850 inkjet uber-hires printer at it's finest setting with it's highest grade "special" photopaper. I sent the data over at 122 PPI - which is supposedly what some higher resolution magazines generally use as source image data.
Here's a crop of the image with the area we're looking at marked:
I also cut off the bottom and side a little bit in a crop to make it generally smaller.
OK, let's see what it looks like in photoshop zoomed up on that area with all the display diffusion dither settings turned off of course.
This is grabbed in PNG format so that there'll be no j-peg noise. These are
the actual pixels that were sent to the printer.
Now let's look at what the printer and driver did to the data.
Wow that looks dithered inside and out and interpolated to me at first glance. But that's what my camera saw... Maybe it added something? OK, here then is a scan of the same area with all the color profiling, dithering, and other options turned off:
Hmm, yeah, I suppose it
could be only internal dithering as you say. Whatever it is it sure made a smooth mess of the original pixels.
The data is here. What conclusions do you draw?