On 18 January 2013 21:29, Marti Maria <marti.ma...@littlecms.com> wrote: > This is from more than 5 years, but still valid and very good. It answers > many of your questions.
Yes, an interesting read, thanks. It doesn't seem to address the fact that LCD displays can't show absolute black -- so the nice graphs showing a power curve that goes through (0,0) is wildly different to reality. I'm also having problems with things like this "Viewing environments typical of computing are quite bright. When an image is coded according to video standards it implicitly carries the assumption of a dim surround. If it is displayed without correction in a bright ambient, it will appear contrasty. In this circumstance you should apply a power function with an exponent of about 1⁄ 1.1 or 1⁄ 1.2 to correct for your bright surround." -- there must be more maths here. Richard. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Master HTML5, CSS3, ASP.NET, MVC, AJAX, Knockout.js, Web API and much more. Get web development skills now with LearnDevNow - 350+ hours of step-by-step video tutorials by Microsoft MVPs and experts. SALE $99.99 this month only -- learn more at: http://p.sf.net/sfu/learnmore_122812 _______________________________________________ Lcms-user mailing list Lcms-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/lcms-user