GroundedGator,

Magic smoke.

Can’t convince me otherwise. Anyone that disagrees is a dirty communist.

ook_the_librarian,
@ook_the_librarian@lemmy.world avatar

I hate when the magic smokes leaks out. Never works right again.

banneryear1868,

Same way a printer works, or color blending for that matter, with RGB or CMYK you can make any color. Primary colors and brightness. Greyscales and magentas are extra-spectral.

Thorny_Insight,

Another thing that’s curious about these lights which also applies to your computer/smartphone display aswell is the fact that it’s able to produce yellow color despite only having red, green and blue leds in it. If you open up a yellow picture on your monitor and look closely with a magnifying glass there’s no yellow there.

cheese_greater,

Thats another thing I don’t get. Itf you look at your tv screen real close its all red/green/blue. Every pixel/cell, how does it appear different from far away

ClassyHatter,
@ClassyHatter@sopuli.xyz avatar

Human eyes have three kinds of cells (photoreceptors) for color detection. They each react to either red, green or blue light. If more than one of those cells are activated, your brain interprets the light based on what cells activated, and how strongly they activated. If red and green cells activates, the light is seen as yellow. The light is seen as white if all of them activates fully.

This also means that light bulbs can produce white light by simply producing three wavelengths (colors) of light. The problem with that kind of “fake” white is that colors will look wrong under such light due to the way how objects reflects light. This is very common with low quality LED lights, and even the best smart lights aren’t very good at it. When buying LED lights, you might want to look at the CRI (Color Rendering Index) value and make sure it’s above 90, or as high as possible.

KpntAutismus,

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/08f80901-0203-4a31-bc6a-d06cc617bcd7.png

that’s how.

one of the 3 LEDs can have 256 levels of brightness (off included)

take that to the power of three, and you have 16 million colours.

but no mortal can actually tell the difference between 255, 255, 255 and 255, 254, 255.

MajorMajormajormajor,

Don’t underestimate my power!

funkajunk,
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

but no mortal can actually tell the difference between 255, 255, 255 and 255, 254, 255.

Maybe YOU can’t, but don’t speak for the rest of us 😤

variants,

Next you’re going to tell me the human eye is capable of differentiating fps above 30

funkajunk,
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

Nah, that’s crazy, it only goes up to a crispy 24 fps. Everyone knows that.

Kolanaki, (edited )
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

I play with the color slider in so many games, I can totally tell the difference. It’s 1 less green.

awwwyissss,

Was going to say “what a high quality answer”, then I saw you have twice the votes the post has. Well deserved.

Usernameblankface,
@Usernameblankface@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, essentially the same sourcery behind every pixel of any modern display. The bulb is one pixel.

So… Wait… Does this mean thousands of Hue bulbs can be a display screen? Has this been done?

KpntAutismus,

those really huge displays are often millions of individual RGB LEDs. it would just be a software nightmare to do with hue bulbs.

Hyperlon,

If they were hardwired yes, but zigbee with millions of bulbs?

tal, (edited )
@tal@lemmy.today avatar

but no mortal can actually tell the difference between 255, 255, 255 and 255, 254, 255.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colour_banding

You can see some slight shifts even at 24-bit depth, if side-by-side. It produces a faint-but-visible banding.

Here’s an example (suggesting use of dithering to obscure it):

sean.cm/a/how-to-fix-banding-in-gradients

fin,
infinitevalence,
@infinitevalence@discuss.online avatar

By combining Red, Blue, and Green LEDs.

Each color gets it’s own value and when you combine them all you get a district color value.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_depth

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