I've got a fancy HD computer screen, but I have yet to get a new TV, so I've got a big fat, 27 inch, 4:3 standard definition projection TV that can't do digital without a box and has only mono sound output. When working on design projects I like to have movies playing in the background, and usually I have this running in a portion of my second monitor. Problem is...I only have one monitor at the moment. One screen isn't big enough for all this, so I've been watching DVDs on my TV, playing from my PS2.
And I've noticed my TV gives much more saturated color than my computer monitors ever did. I'm sure it's oversaturating anything, I'm watching Frozen right now and sometimes the contrast between their pinkish, orangish, firelit skin and the blueish moonlit snow nearly hurts the eyes. But it's still really, really cool[footnote]Like yeah, cool cause it's "Frozen," har har. But seriously, cool.[/footnote]. And the true RGB color processing on the screen makes all the whites just seem more alive and vibrant.
I'm afraid now whenever I do get a second monitor, I'll be tempted to jack up the gamma and contrast to try and replicate the effect. I'm completely fine with eye-stinging colors and high contrast, and being used to dealing with carefully color balanced screens and broadcast safe colors at work, I haven't seen this kind of insane saturation in a while. I can't even recall seeing this kind of color in the theater.
So, are there any inferior technologies you cling to because they deliver an experience new things just can't replicate? Perhaps you still buy your music albums in vinyl, or shoot photographs in film?
Captcha: My friends can't dance. Well I would hope not Captcha, I imagine your friends are mostly computers. That would be a bit strange.
And I've noticed my TV gives much more saturated color than my computer monitors ever did. I'm sure it's oversaturating anything, I'm watching Frozen right now and sometimes the contrast between their pinkish, orangish, firelit skin and the blueish moonlit snow nearly hurts the eyes. But it's still really, really cool[footnote]Like yeah, cool cause it's "Frozen," har har. But seriously, cool.[/footnote]. And the true RGB color processing on the screen makes all the whites just seem more alive and vibrant.
I'm afraid now whenever I do get a second monitor, I'll be tempted to jack up the gamma and contrast to try and replicate the effect. I'm completely fine with eye-stinging colors and high contrast, and being used to dealing with carefully color balanced screens and broadcast safe colors at work, I haven't seen this kind of insane saturation in a while. I can't even recall seeing this kind of color in the theater.
So, are there any inferior technologies you cling to because they deliver an experience new things just can't replicate? Perhaps you still buy your music albums in vinyl, or shoot photographs in film?
Captcha: My friends can't dance. Well I would hope not Captcha, I imagine your friends are mostly computers. That would be a bit strange.