After reading through the preceding pages, I'm sure that many people are looking and saying, "What next?" The answer, as I'm sure you're not surprised about in the slightest, is already being hyped.
Screen resolutions have different color depths, which determine the number of unique colors the computer can reproduce in an image. The higher the color depth, the better pictures and videos look on a ...
Apple's latest 4K and 5K iMacs support a 10-bit graphics driver on OS X El Capitan, allowing for smoother color transitions, according to German website Mac & i. The 10-bit color output enables 1024 ...
I enabled screen sharing on my mac so that I can connect to it from windows (using tightvnc). It works but the performance is horrible. None of the lower color options in tightvnc work with the os x ...
Color accuracy went south at the introduction of LED-backlit LCDs, due largely to the extreme skew to the blue end of the spectrum that early backlights were prone to. Fortunately, the TV industry has ...
For starters, there are multiple formats of high dynamic range support to consider, along with high frame rates, multiple object-based sound systems to pick through, all sorts of issues surrounding ...
Is there some way to execute a command in a batch file that will change the color depth from, say, 16 bit to 256 colors?<BR><BR>OS is Win 98. Using the desktop controls I can change the depth easily ...
What happens when you take a picture in a fluorescent-lit office environment? It comes out green. And why is that? Because fluorescent bulbs don't actually produce white light - instead, they're ...