The graphs look good to me.

馃憤

__________________
Robert Quattlebaum
(Sent from iPhone)

On May 11, 2013, at 7:21 AM, Timoth茅e Giet <anim...@gmail.com> wrote:

> 
>> Synfig Studio does do monitor-specific color correction. It allows you to 
>> correct for the monitor gamma (per channel) and the monitor black level. 
>> This was implemented before there was good color management on Linux. I'm 
>> not sure what the state of color management is in the FOSS world, but 
>> replacing that old mechanism entirely with a real ICC-based color management 
>> system would be ideal.
> 
> That's what I supposed, but with lack of doc about it I couldn't be sure 
> until now that you confirm it. Thanks again.
> 
> About the state of color management in the FOSS world, it's still not perfect 
> but it's quite good already:
> 
> -most applications that care about it use lcms (now lcms2) to make color 
> management internally
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LittleCMS
> -We have Argyllcms as a good cli engine to create device profiles and more...
> http://www.argyllcms.com/
> -most distributions ship colord as "a system service that makes it easy to 
> manage, install and generate color profiles to accurately color manage input 
> and output devices."
> http://www.freedesktop.org/software/colord/intro.html
> -alternatively to colord we can use oyranos, which has different goal to 
> provide more advanced tools:
> http://www.oyranos.org/
> 
> Most distributions don't have any system "fullscreen color management".
> Currently it's possible to have it using compicc if you use Compiz 
> compositor, which color corrects directly everything on the screen, 
> whith possible opt-out of color correction for specialised graphics 
> applications that do it directly. But not very nice option with current 
> compiz status..
> Looks like they plan to do something similar in future version of Gnome 
> compositor.
> But anyway we don't really need "fullscreen color management", as all other 
> graphics applications we can handle it directly ;) .
> 
> 
> Carlos asked me for a "blocks flow diagram", "a sort of visual representation 
> of the color flowing and the math operations made in each conversion",
> so here is a drawing with the basic idea. Comments are welcome.
> 
> <SynfigColorManagement.svg>
> <SynfigColorManagement.png>
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