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ArcticMyst Security by Avery

Can you still see the colors? xD

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zaery

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wtf, are you telling me that EACH one is different from EACH other? I just see "groups" of 3 or 4 all being the same color...

Yeah, each one is different.
You could just have a bad monitor, or problems with your eyes :whistle:
 
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LOL I used works CRT monitor... I got 56.. The colours from "hue 1" to "hue 2" (begining and end hue) looks very close in colour, and all the others inbetween looks sooo close to each other. I want to try this again when I get home and can use my LCD monitor.

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Your score: 23
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I'm using a 20" LCD monitor, so I have no excuse...
 

KiLLrB

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Your score: 23
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I'm using a 20" LCD monitor, so I have no excuse...

I have a 23" lcd and got 88 what does that have to do with it?
 
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aXit

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Happy with that.

First attempt, about 5 minutes. I just kind of blur my eyes and look for gradients. The hardest part for me was around boxes 3-6 from the left on the third row.
 
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I have a 23" lcd and got 88 what does that have to do with it?
I think I had to give a bit of explanation when stating that the display used can make a difference. In short, there are few common technologies used for LCD displays:

  • TN - this is the most common type of TFT display. Cheap to manufacture and used in most consumer grade monitors (as well as almost all laptops). Suffers from terrible viewing angles and supports only 6 bits per colour channel (in contrast to others which have 8 bits per channel). So, this means a TN display can produce only 262144 colours (8 bit - 16,7m). In order to overcome this issue, manufacturers use dithering to display more colours (but it doesn't always work well). To check if your monitor is TN just look at it from the bottom. If the picture becomes dark/colour distorted your display is TN.
  • PVA/MVA and their derivatives - they have good colour reproduction, nice viewing angles and good reaction time, but are more expensive. The monitor I'm using is 24" S-PVA.
  • IPS and derivatives - best colour reproduction, expensive, most high-end monitors use this technology. If you are graphics designer you most likely have one of these :D
However, the technology of the display used while doing the test, doesn't always matter. I just did the test once again on my laptop screen. I got "0" again. But there may be large difference between TN panels.
 
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KiLLrB

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I think I had to give a bit of explanation when stating that the display used can make a difference. In short, there are few common technologies used for LCD displays:

  • TN - this is the most common type of TFT display. Cheap to manufacture and used in most consumer grade monitors (as well as almost all laptops). Suffers from terrible viewing angles and supports only 6 bits per colour channel (in contrast to others which have 8 bits per channel). So, this means a TN display can produce only 262144 colours (8 bit - 16,7m). In order to overcome this issue, manufacturers use dithering to display more colours (but it doesn't always work well). To check if your monitor is TN just look at it from the bottom. If the picture becomes dark/colour distorted your display is TN.
  • PVA/MVA and their derivatives - they have good colour reproduction, nice viewing angles and good reaction time, but are more expensive. The monitor I'm using is 24" S-PVA.
  • IPS and derivatives - best colour reproduction, expensive, most high-end monitors use this technology. If you are graphics designer you most likely have one of these :D
However, the technology of the display used while doing the test, doesn't always matter. I just did the test once again on my laptop screen. I got "0" again. But there may be large difference between TN panels.

What i was saying was the screen size doesnt really matter
 
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im tired ..
 

Raybo

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HEY!

Not bad for an old man.


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"You have perfect color vision!" I got a zero, which surprises me a lot because my eyes suck. I guess color interpretation doesn't have much to do with my other eye problems...lol
 

Jaseth

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I am pretty sure that's true Drake, my eyesight is perfect apart from my colour blindness. Seems like colour and focus of the eye are unrelated.

Seb
 




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