Am Mit, den 21.01.2004 schrieb Adam D. Moss um 20:28:
> > In OSX many applications tend to provide a quick redraw for pannings
> > but start a timer which will refine the display once it was static
> > for a while.
> Hee hee... it's interesting how things can come full-circle.
> GIMP 0.5[34] did
Daniel Egger wrote:
On Jan 20, 2004, at 5:48 pm, Sven Neumann wrote:
Well, actually we'd like to add interpolation to the GIMP canvas as
well. At least optionally. Modern computer hardware seems fast enough
to do this, especially when one takes advantages of CPU acceleration
features (MMX, SSE, ..
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On Jan 20, 2004, at 5:48 pm, Sven Neumann wrote:
Well, actually we'd like to add interpolation to the GIMP canvas as
well. At least optionally. Modern computer hardware seems fast enough
to do this, espec
Hi,
"Austin Donnelly" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> That's because the screen display code doesn't smooth the image when it
> scales it, for speed reasons. Dedicated viewing programs can afford to do a
> better job showing the image because they won't be re-drawing it quite so
> often (imaging p
you'd like that
to be fast, right?)
Austin
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:gimp-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Gómez
> Sent: 07 January 2004 22:04
> To: Sven Neumann
> Cc: Gimp-devel
> Subject: Re: [Gimp-developer] Dithering
>
Hi Sven ;),
> The GIMP display canvas uses the dithering routines from GdkRGB which
> is probably what you are refering to.
Yes i was referring to GdkRGB dithering, but it seems that was not
the cause of the problem, as i said in my previous mail, and i was
wrong thinking that was caused by gimp
Hi Yosh ;),
> > The GIMP display canvas uses the dithering routines from GdkRGB which
> > is probably what you are refering to. Of course this does only affect
> > the display, not the image data. I am not sure but I think I remember
> > a plug-in that could apply dithering to RGB images w/o conve
Hi David ;),
> This is a normal phenomenon when moving to higher bitdepths.
> Unless you're talking about 16 bits in total, and not 16 bits per
> channel, in which case I'd be a bit mystified...
Yes, i meant 16 bits per channel ;)
> Floyd-Steinberg dithering is basically a way to approximate mor
On Wed, Jan 07, 2004 at 09:43:09PM +0100, Sven Neumann wrote:
> Hi,
>
> David G??mez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I've scanned some jpeg images with a 24bit depth. Some of them are old
> > photographies in black&white that show 'bands' when are displayed on
> > a 16 bit depth display. After
Hi David,
David Gómez wrote:
> I've scanned some jpeg images with a 24bit depth. Some of them are old
> photographies in black&white that show 'bands' when are displayed on
> a 16 bit depth display.
This is a normal phenomenon when moving to higher bitdepths.
Unless you're talking about 16 bits i
Hi,
David GÃmez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've scanned some jpeg images with a 24bit depth. Some of them are old
> photographies in black&white that show 'bands' when are displayed on
> a 16 bit depth display. After digging in the menus i noticed that the
> image could be transformed to a ind
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