Ever wondered why an image looks different on every monitor? Why do some of the pictures taken from a phone look surprisingly better on another phone’s display? The answer is how the display has been ...
You may not immediately think of it, but every screen or monitor out there is very different. Each screen you come across has ...
Paint.NET, a popular free image editor for Windows, is getting a big feature update. Its first alpha version (5.1) is now available for download with a few notable changes, such as full color profile ...
Some Mac users, especially those working within marketing, graphics, and image production industries, must ensure colors replicate properly between applications, on various devices, and when printing.
I bought myself a new monitor today, a Dell UltraSharp U2212HM with an IPS panel. I needed to upgrade from my previous cheap-ass Asus one, because no matter how much I tried to calibrate that one, I ...
The color space most of us are familiar with is RGB, or red, green and blue, which is an additive model – adding different amounts of each color creates a specific hue. The problem is that RGB doesn’t ...
The Google Docs productivity suite now supports “less common” image formats like TIFF when converting documents from other services like Microsoft Office. Additionally, Google says Docs can now embed ...
Every monitor has a color profile, which is why an image may look better on one than another. The same applies to documents, web pages, and everything else. So how do you make an image on one monitor ...
A leaker claims Samsung could offer a ‘vivid’ photo style in ‘the next version’ of One UI 8. This would allow you to take photos with more saturated colors compared to the default profile.