Thread: Screen Size
View Single Post
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 08-20-2008, 07:42 PM
clockcycle's Avatar
clockcycle
VIP Member
Offline
Location: SO_FLA
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,804
Reputation: 1067
clockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on repclockcycle is halfway to VIP status based on rep
Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Re: Screen Size

Quote:
Originally Posted by GoodThings2Life View Post
The human eye can't even distinguish such high color counts, and the high count just increases RAM usage anyway, so I don't know why some are so concerned about it.
I was of this same idea, until I just looked it up to back you up on that statement. I thought we only distinguished 4096 colors, but it seems I am wrong according to this answer;

http://ask.yahoo.com/20041227.html


Dear Yahoo!:

How many colors can the human eye perceive?

Shelby
Seattle, Washington

Dear Shelby:

Color is how our eyes and brain interpret light. Our eyes can only see radiation with a wavelength of 380 nanometers to 740 nanometers. This is called the visible spectrum of light. Sir Issac Newton listed the pure spectral colors we see in light as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet.

But "Roy G. Biv" isn't the only name in town when it comes to what colors exist. In 1790, researcher Thomas Young said the human eye sees only three colors -- red, blue, and yellow -- and every other color was just a combination of these primary colors. In 1878 Ewald Hering posited a theory of four unique hues of red, green, yellow, and blue, which, when mixed with white or black, represent all the possible colors humans can process. Useful knowledge for painters and printers perhaps, but it doesn't quite answer your question.

The problem is that nobody really knows exactly how many colors the human eye can see. The closest researchers can estimate is millions and millions. Scientific experiments have shown that humans can discriminate between very subtle differences in color, and estimates of the number of colors we can see range as high as 10 million.

Of course, every person's eyes perceive color a bit differently, and every culture has its own names for colors so coming up with an exact number may not be possible.

A different answers;

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_many_c...an_eye_can_see

http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2006/JenniferLeong.shtml
__________________
LG V10 LG-H901BK / LG G4 LG-H811LB (Stock) LG-F500L (QHSUSB__BULK Bricked) / Motorola Nexus 6 (rooted) / Sony Xperia Z3 (rooted)

Last edited by clockcycle; 08-20-2008 at 07:50 PM.
Reply With Quote
This post has been thanked 3 times.