The pixel density must be mind boggling.
Article quoted 326 PPI so about what a decent/modern cell phone displays.
I can definitely still notice pixels on a 4K 27" display, albeit barely, at the distance I sit from my monitor. 8K eliminates that issue altogether. It also eliminates the problem on displays up to perhaps 40".
The linked article also mentioned a, "2.87-inch display, offering 1920x2160 resolution and rolling in at ... (1008 PPI)." Small yes, but no "jtr-visible" pixels in sight.
My late-40s vision is opposite of yours. Everything is fine 18 inches and further, crap 0-18". Need reading glasses.
There is something to be said to making the resolution so high that no one notices any scaling issues at any size, ever. Of course, the insane added cost and compute times for everything make this a crazy plan at the moment.
Seems that getting the O/S and apps to actually scale properly is a cause of many of the scaling problems, not the actual screen resolution. I have Win7 set to 200% with my 43" 4k monitor and some UI elements don't scale and are tiny compared to things that are scaling properly.
And yes, the "insane added cost and compute times" are an added manufacturer side benefit. Now everybody needs to re-buy all new hardware.
AND re-buy apps that scale properly.
These types of monitors are loved by medical and defence industries, but if affordable for the consumer, I see this as good for the IT industry in general.
The medical and defense industries, along with aviation, aerospace, architecture, and pretty much any type of engineering will benefit from 8k monitors. Once all the huge margins are made in those industries, the tech can filter down to up plebes and college students.