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To my eye, using an el cheapo corporate PC and LCD monitor in not-controlled office lighting, I believe the two versions are indistinguishable. Trying a similar chain of conversions has in the past rasterized the graphic for me, which isn't what I wanted. Neither SVG got rasterized - no jaggies apparent up to 3200%. I imported the file using the internal option with "Replace PDF fonts" unticked and saved as an SVG, resulting in a 7 kB SVG. (I don't stay updated because it works, and version updates at work are time-consuming.) I imported the file using the Poppler/Cairo option and saved as an SVG, resulting in an 8 kB SVG. I then twice imported the PDF into Inkscape 0.92.4 (5da689c313, ). This PDF didn't get rasterized - no jaggies at up to 3200%. So I imported the EPS (RGB colorspace) and saved it as a PDF (using default options) resulting in a 7 kB PDF. The only software I have at work (on highly locked-down Windows 10) which opens EPS is Adobe Acrobat DC. The one I needed is available as an EPS (in your choice of colorspaces) with filesize 170 kB for RGB. My employer has a repository of company-approved graphics. It's six letters in a proprietary font and a corporate logo 'bug' in a single (not black) color. I'd post the EPS, but that probably would make somebody in corporate branding mad. I did a similar experiment in converting a graphic logo from EPS to SVG.
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