@LuisMendo No idea, but I have you an upvote for increased exposure.
What is the denominator meant to represent? It is not the general probability of getting sick. If it were numbers, you would compute the fraction of people that got sick while being vaccinated to the total number people that got sick. But with probabilities… not sure what the sum means.
I need to explain to someone how interpolating colours in RGB space is not ideal, and that there are better color spaces for that. Does anyone know a good blog post7demo/reference for that?
Articles from 1980 are great. "The method is simple, quick and inexpensive. However, access to a computer capable of using the FORTRAN language is necessary." Today perhaps as difficult as back then, to find a PC capable of running FORTRAN 77 natively
@flawr Interpolation in RGB is fine. RGB is not perceptually uniform, but it does represent light. At least linear RGB does (what comes off of the CCD), sRGB doesn’t. Adding linear RGB is like adding light.
Our respond love light is not linear nor uniform, but that doesn’t mean you can’t average light. It depends on the goal. Averaging equal amounts of green and blue in RGB might produce something perceptually closer to green, but it’s still a correct average if you look at the light being averaged.
I do hate those quick and dirty shit-fixes, because the OP will blindly accept and use this, only to come back crying next week that it doesn't work in a slightly different case. Especially given the proper solution, i.e. yours, is so easy!
In the 80’s we had a programming class in school, on shitty Sharp home computers running BASIC natively (the interpreter was the OS). This was way too simple for me, so I bought a FORTRAN book and tried to get the teacher to help me by reading my code written on paper and telling me if it’d work. I didn’t have access to a computer with FORTRAN.
Basically OP was angered that one of their comments got deleted (no idea which one) and responded with a lot of rudeness and swear words. And copy-pasted the comment as soon as the system allowed them to post another, hence the plethora of flags.
So the comment-scraping bot in SO Botics picked up the first and on it went
Happens more often that someone is mad their fantastic comment gets removed, but not often do they reposted their rant 25 times
@flawr Yeah, what you get out of a JPEG file has been modified so heavily from the raw RGB that it's basically useless to try to use that for anything quantitative. You wouldn't believe how much processing is done in-camera before a JPEG file is written.
@CrisLuengo one of the main claims of my PhD was that it's incorrect to treat detectors as linear (gray level vs illumination) for quantitative purposes :)
@Dev-iL I think I read some of your work, but I don't remember that bit. In fluorescence microscopy it is assumed that detectors are linear within a certain range. Lots of things would break down if this weren't the case.
(also, my memory is really bad, I tend to forget many of the things I've read)
@CrisLuengo that's the interesting part... This phenomenon was originally observed in analog films, but it happens in semiconductor detectors as well! I can provide some references if you want
@link - thanks, and don't worry about it.. My cover is pretty much blown already :)
Wordle Sneak PreviewsThere several sites on the Web that reveal the solution to the Wordle puzzle in the New York Times while it is still in play. Some of these sites are in India, where India... read more >>