All the other brands went along
If you have multiple ports driven off the same internal hub, they will share bandwidth.
I'm usually happy with increased efficiency as it represents an increase in performance in the future. Cost is something that seems much more inevitable to go down than performance is to go up, so the two metrics I look for in the state of the CPU market are peak single core performance and performance per watt. Of course, this only applies to observing the industry from outside, I'm sure if I was actually in the market for a new CPU right now I'd probably be happier with a worse performance per watt chip as long as it was cheaper.
yea I know thats why I called it a slippery slope, because if you know for certain that there's only one wavelength in the scene then you could tell its cyan, but if it could be any spectrum then you would have no idea
I called black a real color because if we see black, we know for certain there’s actually no light.
And yes I know all that other stuff.
Wikipedia calls metallic colors colors, which implies that any arbitrary brdf is now a color. Personally I would only call the photons travelling through the air at any specific point in space a color, and say that the object's color changes when you move it around. I guess you would still say that a red metal sphere is red though, so my definition doesn't really work.
I was saying there are times when you can't treat other colors as being made form primaries, specifically when the spectrum will later be separated. (by diffraction or by materials with a complex spectral response)
for example, you could have 2 clear yellow sheets that look identical when placed in front of a full spectrum white light. However, one lets through red and green and one lets through yellow wavelengths. Suddenly now they behave very differently when you put them in front of a green light - the one that only lets through yellow looks black and the one that lets through green looks green.
going back to the part where I labeled yellow as a slippery slope, its because we can't really see whether there are yellow wavelengths or not in examples like these or others
also, a fun side note, you can actually see diffraction patterns by looking through any aperture (but a diffraction grating will make it more obvious) and these respond noticeably differently to all wavelengths and look wrong if you only consider the primaries. So, technically, if you're looking at any scene through any sort of camera/lens system/eye, you can't treat the scene as only having 3 primaries as it would look (imperceptibly) different if you considered all wavelengths. Actually, recreating this video in Python is what got me thinking about this. If you look at a very bright white point of light made of very specifically only red green and blue wavelengths you might actually be able to see this, it should look like
instead of
(its very subtle and you might need to zoom in but it looks a lot more noisy)
sometimes suddenly you can't pretend color is just red green and blue, once you get diffraction or are using a spectral renderer or smth, but yea it works 99% of the time
I guess you could call this pink
but I would normally think of it more in the magenta range of orin the c/196 banner there is more red than green, meaning the fully saturated version wouldn't correspond to a real wavelength
anyways, I'm not trying to say that those colors don't exist because obviously we can see them, just that they show the weaknesses of human color perception
yea, if there is a single wavelength and its yellow we could see it. However, if you had a full spectrum of light and took away all of the yellow but added some red and green you wouldn't be able to tell that there's no yellow, because we can't see yellow, only imply it from the red-ness and green-ness
i'm pretty sure you couldn't pull off the same trick with red, green, or blue but I guess I don't really know
I'll start by saying the computer rgb and hsl models are an abstraction matching how we perceive light that doesn't include any other spectral information that we can't see
in terms of wavelengths of light, pink is not a hue, unlike other fully saturated colors it does not have a wavelength to go along with it
yes, you can combine red and blue to make pink, but then you're looking at the wavelengths of red and blue and not those of pink (because pink doesn't have a wavelength)
any color that isn't red, green, or blue could be any one of an unlimited number of spectrums that would produce the same perceived result, but any fully saturated color other than pink does have one single wavelength that goes along with it
like I said above, hue is analogous to wavelength, saturation is analogous to the 'unpure-ness' of the wavelengths, and value/luminance is analogous to the quantity of those wavelengths - and pink is one that breaks this pattern
well these ones specifically are displayed on your monitor (which can only display red, green, and blue) so they actually aren't real
your eyes are being tricked into thinking there's yellow for example, when there's really only red and green, this is because we can't really see yellow, we can just guess that its there based on the relative red-ness and green-ness of the light
However, it is very lucky for monitor manufacturers that we're so easily 'fooled'
I guess the hue and maybe saturation are undefined there according to most color models (HSL would have hue and saturation undefined for white but HSV would only have hue undefined)
look at this chart, and look for the pink. It isn't there, because pink isn't real
I should have excluded king blue and violet tho, those are actually real, mb
its developed by Mozilla
Populism isn’t necessarily bad, business antitrust regulations and the 8 hour workday were historically populist policies. Dems shouldn’t go all out on populism, but they should do something to become popular. Elections are a popularity contest after all.
I think a big part of this might be the Democrats not wanting to take the populist pro-worker anti-rich stances due to campaign donations.
This is the second time this has happened. Democrats in the 50s-60s realized they could get votes in the North by not being racist, while Republicans at the same time realized they could get votes in the South by being racist. It just really shows that neither side really cares all that much, it’s mostly a show for political gain.
This query was most popular in Vermont.
the related queries (statistically correlated based on time, etc):
- "how to move to australia from usa"
- "how to move to scotland from us"
- "english speaking countries"
- "where to move if trump is elected"
- "how to move to germany from the us"
it does seem to share a lot of the worse aspects of the U.S., such as dysfunctional national transit systems
I don't really understand how USB stuff works (what is the difference between a hub, interface, and controller?) but from what I've seen I think a hub supporting 20gbps would probably be in the 5-15$ range and probably not larger than a few centimeters