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Discussion (9 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
While present in some of their previous articles sparingly, this is the first one to use it consistently.
Maybe an expert can clarify. My sense is that we actually were seeing amazing specs on displays toward the end of the CRT era—and that there was a kind of LCD lull where we traded color fidelity, gamut and dynamic range for thinness. But we are now seeing display technology catching up to and perhaps exceeding the best of the CRT displays?
The early LCDs were poor because of limitations of the backlight’s spectrum. Once LED backlights were introduced, this was no longer a problem.
From what I gather, it's an attempt to address the problem of observer metamerism, but I'm curious to know how closely it's tethered to D65.
It’s not just a matter of introducing a correction factor (although that exists, see Judd-Vos) because the solution is more complex than that. The practical take away is that color matching cannot just involve comparing a narrow point in isolation but also needs to have a baseline of controlled surround and specular reflections in addition to understanding the nature of the perceived color (reflective, emissive, narrowband, wideband, etc.).