|
|
|
|
|
by mdwrigh2
1608 days ago
|
|
I'm not the parent you're asking, but figure you might be interested anyways since I could've likely made the same comment: I work on displays within an OS team. Having some basic understanding of colour theory is critical for a significant number of modern display projects, particularly for the high end. For example, enabling colour accurate rendering (games, photos, etc), shipping wide-gamut displays (how do you render existing content on a WCG display?), etc. More specifically to the planckian locus, it generally comes up when deciding which white point to calibrate a given display to at the factory (e.g. iPhone is 6470K, S20 is 7020K in Vivid)[1][2] and if you're doing any sort of chromatic white point adaptation, like Apple's True Tone[1][2]. My background before joining the team was a degree in math, but I really enjoyed doing low level projects in my spare time, so ended up on an OS team. We also have colour scientists who study this full time and have a _significantly_ better understanding of it all than I do :) [1]: https://www.displaymate.com/iPhone_13Pro_ShootOut_1M.htm#Whi...
[2]: https://www.displaymate.com/Galaxy_S20_ShootOut_1U.htm#White...
[3]: https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT208909
[4]: http://yuhaozhu.com/blog/chromatic-adaptation.html |
|