I agree that when we say something IS a color, we mean "it reflects certain wavelengths" but I disagree with the conclusion.
Let's say you have a red box and a blue box. You put a brick in the blue box then put both boxes in the dark closet. Someone asks you the color of the box with the brick. What do you tell them?
If it makes sense that the blue box is no longer blue in the dark, we'd ask "what color will the box be when I open the door?"
Therefore, I'd argue that the color of an object is defined by it's capacity to reflect/emit light. After all, is a farmer not a farmer while they sleep?
But if you took a box you know is blue into the pitch black room, nothing changes about the box. Would it not still have the same characteristics that cause us to perceive it as blue?
Likewise, is it still blue if you close your eyes?
Not to be too pedantic but that last one isn't quite correct. Color "happens" after the object is hit with light - it's defined by our perception of the wavelengths that bounce off.
Which I suppose raises the question... Is a blue box still blue in total darkness? Is its color defined by the light its reflecting or it's capacity to reflect? I think the latter but I don't really know
My lack of Linux knowledge is showing...I was under the impression Arch was more for "hardcore" users, is that an outdated mindset (or was it ever true)?
Does Kubuntu come as "preconfigured" as the more gaming-focused distros? I've heard one of the benefits of those is that a lot of the GPU stuff (drivers, config) works out of the box
Redownloading games isn't a big deal, I just don't want to take the time to make space and transfer it if it's gonna freak out lol
Do any distros perform better out-of-the-box with Nvidia?
I didn't expect to switch so soon so I'm just now deciding. I'm currently torn between Pop OS and Mint. I don't think I want steamOS because gaming is only half of what I use my PC for - I'd rather a more desktop-oriented distro
My only Linux experience is a few servers and laptops over the years but I'm comfortable following along with CLI tutorials
Are my current game files useless or can I copy them over?
90% of my games are on a secondary 2tb NVME. I have a home server I can back them up them up to before reformatting but I'm guessing I can't just point Steam to that folder and have it rebuild my library, right?
When it's time to upgrade the rest of the machine, should I go AMD for the cpu?
Conventional wisdom used to be pairing Intel with Nvidia and AMD with AMD. Is that still the case? Should I stick to Intel?
I was subscribed to it the first week it existed so I know that your story is completely fabricated. The origin is even in the subreddit wiki...
/r/NoStupidQuestions was founded in February 2013 for people to feel free to ask the questions they might be embarrassed or ashamed to ask elsewhere. Inspired by this thread and specifically this comment
Look at the questions in that thread. It was always about silly little questions
I agree that when we say something IS a color, we mean "it reflects certain wavelengths" but I disagree with the conclusion.
Let's say you have a red box and a blue box. You put a brick in the blue box then put both boxes in the dark closet. Someone asks you the color of the box with the brick. What do you tell them?
If it makes sense that the blue box is no longer blue in the dark, we'd ask "what color will the box be when I open the door?"
Therefore, I'd argue that the color of an object is defined by it's capacity to reflect/emit light. After all, is a farmer not a farmer while they sleep?