Are you saying, "look at the image. Highlight sections of each color spectrum where there appear to be no differences in color temperature, i.e. that blend too well"?
OP, did you not read this?Nope, you've still got a bad image. The RGB values for the first two red chips (on the right) are the exact same value. Same for the first four green chips, and the first two blue chips are only 1 unit off, which in most cases is not human-perceptible. In other words, those chips will always look the same (and appear clipped) no matter what display you view them on, because they are the same.
OP, did you not read this?
You're using a terrible image.
You THINK they look different. It's an optical illusion. Have you actually checked the RGB values as HiRez did?
Nope, you've still got a bad image. The RGB values for the first two red chips (on the right) are the exact same value. Same for the first four green chips, and the first two blue chips are only 1 unit off, which in most cases is not human-perceptible. In other words, those chips will always look the same (and appear clipped) no matter what display you view them on, because they are the same.
Try this image:
View attachment 295627
In this image, I can clearly distinguish every chip for each of the R, G, and B scales (13" 2011 Air with Samsung display). I have my display calibrated using a Spyder 3 Elite calibrator. The display looks pretty good calibrated, but I find the reds on this panel a bit weak, they look a bit "peach-ish" instead of deep, solid red. But not bad.
OK, I think I finally figured out what's happening here...kind of anyway. It seems there's some browser rendering issue with Lion Safari. When I view the images in Safari on my Air (2011 13" Samsung display), I see clipped chips. But, when I view the same images in Google Chrome, on the same Air, I see all the chips. My best guess is it's a ColorSync thing, probably the images have a ColorSync profile, which Safari is honoring or interpreting, while Chrome is ignoring ColorSync. And because I was using Digital Color Meter to measure with, it was showing me whatever Safari was rendering in terms of RGB numeric values.
So try viewing these files in Chrome or maybe Firefox and see if you can see all the chips. I don't think it's an Air hardware problem, I think it's a Safari issue (whether it's strictly a "problem" or not I don't know yet, maybe it's a bad ColorSync profile attached to the image).
Confirm+1OK, I think I finally figured out what's happening here...kind of anyway. It seems there's some browser rendering issue with Lion Safari. When I view the images in Safari on my Air (2011 13" Samsung display), I see clipped chips. But, when I view the same images in Google Chrome, on the same Air, I see all the chips. My best guess is it's a ColorSync thing, probably the images have a ColorSync profile, which Safari is honoring or interpreting, while Chrome is ignoring ColorSync. And because I was using Digital Color Meter to measure with, it was showing me whatever Safari was rendering in terms of RGB numeric values.
So try viewing these files in Chrome or maybe Firefox and see if you can see all the chips. I don't think it's an Air hardware problem, I think it's a Safari issue (whether it's strictly a "problem" or not I don't know yet, maybe it's a bad ColorSync profile attached to the image).
LOL! Opening the page in Firefox, can see all the color blocks fine. Blame Safari!!!![]()
Can somebody please explain how they make the association between the LTH and LP codes with Samsung and LG, respectively?
It came from another thread..
To identify your display
open terminal , paste
ioreg -lw0 | grep IODisplayEDID | sed "/[^<]*</s///" | xxd -p -r | strings -6
LP = LG Phillips
LTH = Samsung