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Anonymous at Mon, 25 Mar 2024 22:14:25 UTC No. 16096768
Is the RGB system still up to date nowadays? Aren't there better methods to more accurately produce colors?
Anonymous at Mon, 25 Mar 2024 22:22:45 UTC No. 16096774
>>16096768
yes. pigments.
Anonymous at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 07:13:25 UTC No. 16097327
>>16096768
Some screens do have a fourth color. Indeed you can't produce highly saturated colors well with three pigments alone, cyans are often highly missing.
Anonymous at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 10:18:47 UTC No. 16097473
>>16097327
Not really. It was not a fourth color, it was just yellow to increase saturation and contrast. Other methods proved to be superior so that approach was abandoned.
Anonymous at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 10:42:04 UTC No. 16097485
>>16096768
It would be expensive AF. To have accurate images it would require to have digital cameras that would be even more expensive AF. The cameras would need separate sensors for highly saturated Cyan, and Violet since those are the colors that can't be displayed. The monitors would need 67% more dots and electronics, brand new standards to transmit the extra color information, brand new video cards able to work with extra colors, brand new image formats able to store that information, brand new software to process those images and so on, and so on.
Is not going to happen.
Anonymous at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 11:04:36 UTC No. 16097496
>>16097485
Cameras would actually not need to chamge.
elipo at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 11:05:14 UTC No. 16097497
>>16096768
let's be clear, each main three colors gets to chose from 256 different levels
that's 256*256*256 AKA 256^3 possiblities of colors, which is around 16 777 000 different colors
>human eye sees 1 million colors max, so around 17 times less colors, not even counting the different shades
why would you need a new system
Anonymous at Tue, 26 Mar 2024 12:21:17 UTC No. 16097579
>>16097485
Violet light can be created, it's just expensive to do so, lasers that emit violet light are expensive