Yes the A110 is a scale focus camera. That orange tab you see on the front does that. In the VF you see a scale that is linked to it, with the standard scale focus symbols - head, head+shoulders, full body, mountains. It also has numeric distances in between that.
It is a super well built camera, which makes sense given its premium price point at the time.
There is also a cheaper E110 version but I do not recommend that, as the A110 takes a regular 6V p27 battery with which it's SPD cell makes correct exposures.
The E110 has a cDs photocell and it does not works correctly with 6V p27 batteries. Apparently it overexposes by over 2 stops. Both cameras were meant to be used with 5.6V cells.
The camera is really nice to use and handle. And the VF really is surprisingly large and bright. The moment I saw these results I bought another one on ebay! I paid $20 for the one that took these pics - glass is perfect, a small dent on one corner. The second one looks perfect and was $50 with case, chain, pouch, flash adapter.
Some people are asking over $100 for these, so I'd just wait until a normally priced one appears. They also have been made in Germany and Singapore and I would hold out for a German one. It seems that the quality may be a little better.
John, scanning was done as in my DSLR scanning thread here:
https://www.rangefinderforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=161028&page=8
I used a 110 film holder from a Besseler enlarger that I never thought I'd need, but it came in a set with other 120 film ones that I bought. When I scan my 35mm or 120 film, my Micro Nikkor 60 2.8 is perfect. But with the tiny 110 film it needs to focus much closer if I want to film the frame. Again by luck some time ago I picked up some macro tubes just cuz they were cheap, and they are absolutely perfect. With them the 110 frame completely fills the D850's 47mp sensor area!
I admit to how ridiculous this is in a way, the only thing that could top it is scanning Minox micro film with a Phase 1 100mp back!
But it's so much fun, and I had the gear already. It took me forever to find a couple of rolls of Lomo B&W film as it is sold out everywhere, but I'm really impressed by the Lomo colour film and have already seen that it converts to B&W really well in LR. So going forward I think that I'd most probably just use that.