Mailing List Archive
tlug.jp Mailing List tlug archive tlug Mailing List Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Color Codes
- Date: Mon, 24 Jan 2005 15:37:21 -0700
- From: Matt Gushee <mgushee@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Color Codes
- References: <41F4597B.1070605@example.com> <87d5vv487l.fsf@example.com>
- User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0 (X11/20050108)
Stephen J. Turnbull wrote: >>>>>>"Lyle" == Lyle Saxon <Lyle> writes: > > Lyle> These are the colors that show up the same on every computer > Lyle> no matter what (or so I've been told)." > > There are no colors that show up the same on every computer no matter > what; even black and white can be arbitrary. What he said. I think whoever wrote that didn't quite understand the purpose of the "Web-safe palette." It was never supposed to look exactly the same on all displays, but it was supposed to give you a set of colors that could be directly rendered--i.e. without dithering--on *all 8-bit displays.* The palette is unnecessary for 24- and 32-bit displays, and it doesn't work for most 15- and 16-bit displays. So you probably don't need to worry about it if most of your visitors live in the "first world" or in East Asia, where most people have fairly modern hardware. I don't know for sure, but I would imagine there are a lot of people in, say, Africa and South America still using old boxes with 8-bit color. > In practice, most sites use photos and the like; if you're going to do > that, you'd have to work awfully hard to come up with a set of colors > that make the photos look satisfactorily nice and fit into the subset > of colors you can count on being available. True. The big issue, though, was with computer graphics like logos and icons. If you use the wrong colors, dithering on 8-bit displays can make a decent-looking logo into an appalling, even unrecognizable, mess. > For the record, what _is_ a possible worry is underpowered computers > or people who are doing complex visuals (eg in an image or video > editor). In either case it's possible that excessive use of > non-standard colors (basically, the PC-8 plus their bright versions, > giving 16) will result in the display server running out of colors, in > which case the browser makes do in a browser-specific way. Isn't that an X-specific issue? Seems to me that on Windows and MacOS, colors are all shared among all applications. But I'm not an expert on this stuff either. -- Matt Gushee Englewood, CO, USA
- References:
- [tlug] Color Codes
- From: Lyle (Hiroshi) Saxon
- Re: [tlug] Color Codes
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: [tlug] Fedora Friendly Printer
- Next by Date: Re: [tlug] Fedora Friendly Printer
- Previous by thread: Re: [tlug] Color Codes
- Next by thread: [tlug] Re: Color Codes
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links