On Sunday 27 September 2015 12:36:27 Mick wrote:
> Contributing is more involved than simply downloading a profile. I think
> you have to use the TaxiDB API:
>
> http://sourceforge.net/p/openicc/taxi/ci/master/tree/docs/api_doc.txt
Hm. I see what you mean.
> I you are interested then you can c
On Sunday 27 Sep 2015 11:50:54 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday 27 September 2015 10:47:51 Mick wrote:
> > On Sunday 27 Sep 2015 09:58:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > I do have the two .icc files in .local/share/icc:
> > >
> > > $ ls -l .local/share/icc
> > > total 28K
> > > -rw-r--r-- 1 prh prh 1
On Sunday 27 September 2015 10:47:51 Mick wrote:
> On Sunday 27 Sep 2015 09:58:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > I do have the two .icc files in .local/share/icc:
> >
> > $ ls -l .local/share/icc
> > total 28K
> > -rw-r--r-- 1 prh prh 1.2K Sep 9 16:51
> > edid-fbec4f9c1804ea718b6e1b585fc234ad.icc -rw-
On Sunday 27 Sep 2015 09:58:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Saturday 26 September 2015 16:11:04 Mick wrote:
> > Thank you all for your answers. They guided me to do some reading in
> > this field, which is quite a science all on its own!
>
> --->8
>
> > Peter's description does not mention which a
On Saturday 26 September 2015 16:11:04 Mick wrote:
> Thank you all for your answers. They guided me to do some reading in this
> field, which is quite a science all on its own!
--->8
> Peter's description does not mention which application loads the .icc file
> that the hughski creates, but I'm
On Thursday 10 Sep 2015 22:07:44 waben...@gmail.com wrote:
> Mick wrote:
> > On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to
> > sRGB looked mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the
> > sRGB colours were brighter on MSWindows.
> >
> > I tried this by dual booting b
Mick wrote:
> On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to
> sRGB looked mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the
> sRGB colours were brighter on MSWindows.
>
> I tried this by dual booting between MSWindows and Linux.
>
> Then I tried it by running MSWindows
On Wednesday 09 September 2015 14:41:19 Mick wrote:
> Would you mind explaining how it works? You measure the icc of a monitor -
> what do you do with this then? Do you need to be running something like
> colord all the time to feed some correction data to xranrd?
You get a live DVD (Fedora) wi
On Tue, Sep 8, 2015 at 2:42 PM, Mick wrote:
> On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to sRGB looked
> mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the sRGB colours were
> brighter on MSWindows.
>
If everything is working correctly then the CMYK original and sRGB
copy
On Wednesday 09 September 2015 14:41:19 Mick wrote:
> On Wednesday 09 Sep 2015 09:28:54 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Tuesday 08 September 2015 19:42:08 Mick wrote:
> >
> > --->8
> >
> > > So, the Linux renedering seems to be misleading the user. Have you
> > > noticed the same?
> > >
> > > BTW,
On Wednesday 09 Sep 2015 09:28:54 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Tuesday 08 September 2015 19:42:08 Mick wrote:
>
> --->8
>
> > So, the Linux renedering seems to be misleading the user. Have you
> > noticed the same?
> >
> > BTW, both Linux machines that I tried this on are running radeon drivers
>
On Tuesday 08 September 2015 19:42:08 Mick wrote:
--->8
> So, the Linux renedering seems to be misleading the user. Have you noticed
> the same?
>
> BTW, both Linux machines that I tried this on are running radeon drivers -
> are these to blame? The AppleMac is running Intel graphics with its
On Tuesday 08 Sep 2015 23:49:21 wraeth wrote:
> On 09/09/15 04:42, Mick wrote:
> > On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to
> > sRGB looked mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the
> > sRGB colours were brighter on MSWindows.
> >
> > I tried this by dual boot
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On 09/09/15 04:42, Mick wrote:
> On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to
> sRGB looked mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the
> sRGB colours were brighter on MSWindows.
>
> I tried this by dual booting betwe
On the same hardware I noticed that a CMYK photograph converted to sRGB looked
mostly the same (indistinguishable) on Linux, but the sRGB colours were
brighter on MSWindows.
I tried this by dual booting between MSWindows and Linux.
Then I tried it by running MSWindows within a VM on a Linux hos
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