https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=feedcontributions&feedformat=atom&user=76.16.18.252 Wikipedia - User contributions [en] 2024-11-17T10:43:18Z User contributions MediaWiki 1.44.0-wmf.3 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Long-range_acoustic_device&diff=518451019 Talk:Long-range acoustic device 2012-10-18T04:35:59Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{WPMILHIST|class = Start|Weaponry-task-force=yes|US-task-force=yes}}<br /> <br /> == Is this an LRAD? ==<br /> Can anyone confirm that this is an LRAD being used at a protest in Will County IL?<br /> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WkcvFc-78w&amp;feature=autoplay&amp;list=UU3hkeAXkYAPiL-9qqlhmlmQ&amp;playnext=3<br /> == What is ATC? == <br /> Article says, &quot;American companies have been banned from selling arms to China since the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, but the LRAD is described by ATC as a “directed-sounds communications system&quot;.[7]'<br /> -- Perhaps there used to be a description of ATC in previous versions, but in any case it's currently an abbreviation without an explanation and the link it leads to, #7, is a dead link.<br /> What is ATC? [[User:Tharsaile|tharsaile]] ([[User talk:Tharsaile|talk]]) 17:24, 21 March 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Description is Inaccurate==<br /> <br /> WHO keeps changing the USAGE page regarding Paul WAtson and the SSCS? It was the Japanese that used the LRAD in self-defense the why it is worded now makes it look like they were secretly used to attack the activists<br /> <br /> The LRAD uses a phased array which via constructive and destructive interference causes the sound to be more directionalized. It is not just a big speaker as the article suggests. Look at a description on How Stuff Works dot com.<br /> : Actually, read reference #1. Phased array or not, any loudspeaker with the same diameter will have exactly the same (if not more) directivity as this device. Beranek is a much better reference than howstuffworks.<br /> <br /> ----<br /> <br /> I have seen a video about one of these devices<br /> it is designed to only project in a 90 degree or 180 degree<br /> one of these could be taken out by a sniper our somone with a shotgun<br /> [[User:Dudtz|Dudtz]] 9/24/05 12:46 PM EST<br /> <br /> Made the distances consistent, if they are wrong please change them, but a yard is roughly a metre. There are three feet to both a yard and a metre. (Notice: metre, not meter, tee hee hee). [[User:134.226.1.136|134.226.1.136]] 15:38, 6 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> On second thoughts, I'm going to leave the measurements as they are primarily, and just clean up the conversions as per the [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style|Manual Of Style]] [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:14, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Hmmm. I'm still no happy with it, with conversions removed it reads: ''.....33 inches in diameter. At maximum volume, it can emit a warning tone that is 151 decibels at 1 metre....''. It just seems wrong to have inches in one sentance and metres in another. And I'm really not sure what a Watt per metre means (decibel conversion). -- [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:21, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Added a description of the sound. Some early news reports indicated that it emitted an infra-sonic or low frequency sound that knocked people over. That's not the case. A 105 dbSPL signal at low frequencies just isn't enough to do much of anything, other than maybe make somebody want to dance. But 105 dbSPL in the 2k to 5k range is debilitating. Description adapted from <br /> The link to the german website describing the company producing a similar product for Jazz and Classical music concerts no longer works, does anyone know the name of the company or an updated link? -- [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:31, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Threshold of pain ==<br /> <br /> &quot;At maximum volume, it can emit a warning tone that is 151 dBSPL (1000 W/m²) at 1 metre, a level that is very capable of permanently damaging hearing, and 50 times the normal human threshold for pain.&quot;<br /> <br /> What threshold of pain figure is being used to arrive at this factor of 50? -- [[User:70.81.118.123|70.81.118.123]] 06:07, 28 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Hmm, actually, that should be 150 dBSPL, which I just fixed. Anyway, the [[Absolute threshold of hearing|threshold of pain]] is described as being around 120 to 140 dB. Since the threshold of hearing is I&lt;sub&gt;0&lt;/sub&gt; = 10&lt;sup&gt;-12&lt;/sup&gt; watts/m&lt;sup&gt;2&lt;/sup&gt;, and I&lt;sub&gt;DB&lt;/sub&gt; = 10 log&lt;sub&gt;10&lt;/sub&gt;( I / I&lt;sub&gt;0&lt;/sub&gt;), the exact figure that would make 150 dB fifty times the threshold of pain would be 133.0 dB.&amp;#160;— [[User:TheKMan|'''&lt;font color=&quot;#0000FF&quot;&gt;The&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#FF0000&quot;&gt;KMan&lt;/font&gt;''']][[User_talk:TheKMan|&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&lt;sup&gt;&lt;u&gt;talk&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] 09:46, 28 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Works for me (though maybe someone should mention that in the article). Thanks. -- [[User:70.81.118.123|70.81.118.123]] 16:04, 29 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Well, I added a link to the [[Absolute threshold of hearing]] article, which shows a range for threshold of pain. I think I'll stick in a number as well. Thanks&amp;#160;— [[User:TheKMan|'''&lt;font color=&quot;#0000FF&quot;&gt;The&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#FF0000&quot;&gt;KMan&lt;/font&gt;''']][[User_talk:TheKMan|&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&lt;sup&gt;&lt;u&gt;talk&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] 14:00, 30 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Focus and frequency==<br /> Quote: &quot;...can emit sound in a 15 to 30° beam (only at high frequency)...&quot;<br /> :Does that mean the LRAD is only capable of a 'beam' that focused when projecting high-frequency sound, or that it is totally incapable of projecting low-frequency sound? -[[User:JHFTC|Toptomcat]] 15:58, 30 October 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> The wave number is NOT defined as 2πf, but rather 2π/λ. I cannot remember the formula used to express speaker directionality but I would like to verify it, given the aforementioned mistake.<br /> <br /> The paragraph which mentions a regular loudspeaker and the wave number is extremely confusing. If this is true, what's the difference between LRAD and a big speaker? What does wave number have to do with it? I'm of the opinion this should be removed or cleaned up to make sense and to fit well with the article.<br /> <br /> == Remove? ==<br /> <br /> The paragraph which mentions a regular loudspeaker and the wave number is extremely confusing. If this is true, what's the difference between LRAD and a big speaker? What does wave number have to do with it? I'm of the opinion this should be removed or cleaned up to make sense and to fit well with the article. [[user:anonymous6494|anonymous6494]] 22:25, 3 February 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> There is no difference, and that's important to point out. It's been claimed by the manufacturer and press that this is somehow a highly directional speaker. But it isn't - at least any more so than any other speaker of equal size. The wave number discussion illustrates it pretty well I think. [[User:JohnDoe4|JohnDoe4]] 19:25, 5 June 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Actually, that section with the numbers comparing it to a loudspeaker should be flagged as weasel words, unless citations can be provided for those numbers, My father is in the military and I experienced one of these things first hand, and while it's not as directional as they advertise, there is a relatively clear and controllable &quot;laser effect&quot; to the sound, definitely less than 30 degrees. If you don't believe me watch the Future Weapons episode on history channel on this thing. It's pretty interesting. The section on it's usefulness is good, but it should be noted that these have been employed in Iraq at security checkpoints since shortly after their release, only issue is, the military hasn't released much info on their use of it. If they have I haven't heard about it. Keep in mind that since this is a government contracted product, and the military never discloses the full capabilities of any of it's equipment, it's probably much louder and long ranged than they say. For example, the Sr-71 blackbird was said to have a top speed of mach 3.5. It completed missions that went from Hawaii to China and back in under an hour. You do the math. &lt;small&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Sublimation440|Sublimation440]] ([[User talk:Sublimation440|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Sublimation440|contribs]]) 02:50, 23 April 2009 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;!-- Template:Unsigned --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Hey all, this is my first Wikipedia edit ever, so sorry if I get this a bit wrong. They're using these at the G20 conference here in Pittsburgh to disrupt the protests, supposedly the first time ever used on civilians in the U.S. There's plenty of primary sources out on the web, this for example;<br /> <br /> http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/09/25/louder-than-bombs-lrad-sonic-cannon-debuts-in-u-s-at-g20-pro/<br /> <br /> Also, a friend of mine has been taking photos and they're usable under creative commons (with attribution), there are two pictures here; <br /> <br /> http://www.flickr.com/photos/iwasaround/3953056814/<br /> <br /> and I think he's got some pictures of them in use as well, that he hasn't uploaded yet (he's still out there taking photos.) If the license isn't suitable for use by Wikipedia I can check if he'll change it to something you can use.<br /> [[Special:Contributions/128.2.179.248|128.2.179.248]] ([[User talk:128.2.179.248|talk]]) 23:03, 25 September 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == car alarm comparison paragraph? ==<br /> <br /> I do not mean to be insulting to the idea of a Long-Range Acoustic Device with the comparison, but at least on video it is indistinguishable from a standard car alarm. I understand that it is more directed and louder in relation to distance, but the philosophy seems to be identical. Since car alarms are proven not to embarrass thieves or attract the attention of passers-by, due to their sound being so common, alarm manufacturers seem to be using the same strategy as Long Range Acoustical Devices: making the alarms so loud as to keep the thief from being able to think straight enough to steal the car. Is it inappropriate to include a paragraph in this article? --[[User:Zachbe|Zachbe]] ([[User talk:Zachbe|talk]]) 07:09, 30 September 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Car alarms do not cause permanent hearing damage or pain. I would think that it would be insanely inappropriate to connect the two. [[Special:Contributions/216.47.130.179|216.47.130.179]] ([[User talk:216.47.130.179|talk]]) 21:30, 11 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> I do not agree. In my opinion car alarms cause both permanent hearing damage and pain, only on a much subtler scale. Your use of the word &quot;insanely&quot; shows your lack of neutral POV on this. Just as you would draw a connection between a one-inch fish and a similar fish that was a hundred inches long, a connection between two items that operate in the same way with only a difference of scale is entirely logical. I'll meet you half-way by not adding a paragraph, but please leave the link at the bottom.--[[Special:Contributions/41.232.94.171|41.232.94.171]] ([[User talk:41.232.94.171|talk]]) 06:20, 14 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :No, the car alarm link is not useful at the bottom or in the middle of the article. Connecting car alarm with LRAD without an expert source is [[WP:SYNTH|synthesis]]. If an expert compares them, put it in the article. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 12:09, 14 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Not a phased array? ==<br /> <br /> :The device does not use ultrasound, nor is it a phased array; it uses an array of conventional acoustic tweeters<br /> <br /> Entirely incorrect I think. It is my understanding that the tweeters, acting in phase and thereby addding to each others' magnitude, are a phased array? This is what causes the volume to drop dramatically outside the cone of influence - the tweeters on the outside are of the opposite phase, and therefore cancel out the tweeters on the inside... &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/99.228.57.131|99.228.57.131]] ([[User talk:99.228.57.131|talk]]) 08:51, 28 August 2010 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> == Not ultrasonic? ==<br /> <br /> I saw this device on TV a while ago, according to what they said, it is made of a bunch of very tiny ultrasound speakers that emit sound in the ultrasound range modulating it to produce audible sound, it uses ultrasound because the higher frequency disperses significantly less than frequencies in the audible range. What gives? --[[User:TiagoTiago|TiagoTiago]] ([[User talk:TiagoTiago|talk]]) 02:02, 11 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Sea Shepherd==<br /> THE DEVICES USED IN THE FAROE ISLANDS ARE NOT LRADS THEY WERE DEVICES PLACED IN THE OCEAN THAT EMITTED A TONE THAT THE WHALES HEARD. and stop rewording the portion regarding the Japanese using the LRADs against the SS helicopter. The Heli is breaking aviation laws by flying at the ships, I have already spoken with a Flight Standards Officer regarding this matter, and is used to direct the attacks by the RIBs. He is in no danger as he has noise canceling headphones one. The SSCS did use their &quot;LRAD&quot; when they played Rise of the Valkyrie&quot; when sailing close to one of the Japanese ships. &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 03:00, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> :Please show some published, reliable and verifiable information to back up your assertions. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 04:07, 1 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> http://www.icrwhale.org/eng/100209SS.wmv Video of them using their 'LRAD&quot; The Steve Irwin wasn't even in the Fareo Islands. They rented a ship and made claims that they placed devices in the water to scale the dolphins away from the shore http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/news-100820-1.html THIS DOES NOT REFER TO AN LRAD! <br /> Here is a one of the many photo of the helicopter flying &quot;DANGER CLOSE&quot; to the ships http://www.icrwhale.org/gpandsea-img232.htm You need to stop editting the article to make it seem like the Japanese workers are the aggressors &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 06:33, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> :You are saying that the act of hunting whales in an area declared a whale sanctuary is not an aggressive act? Of course the Sea Shepherd takes aggressive action against whalers, trying to prevent them from finding and killing whales. Your link to www.icrwhale.org is not a reliable source, it is the false 'research' organization which exists solely to hunt whales as part of a pretense to engage in research about them, presumably by killing them and making them into dog food and lubricants. Fine research, that.<br /> :Your link to a photograph of a helicopter does not have any relevance to this article about LRAD. The photo could be faked, and it is presented by www.icrwhale.org, not by a news agency or a scholarly source. To be relevant, the helicopter's distance must be commented on by [[WP:RS|reliable]] and [[WP:V|verifiable]] sources.<br /> :Your link to www.seashepherd.org is not reliable either, as it is self-reporting and not a neutral news source, but in any case the underwater loudspeakers they discuss in that article are not LRAD, so I will take that out of the article. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 17:01, 1 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> The title against/by whalers NEEDS TO BE CHANGED. The LRAD is being used against the Sea Shepherd Activists. <br /> THE PHOTO IS NOT FAKED! Why do all SScS supports say the ICR is faking these photos. The SSCS are the ones that have faked photos in the past. Also the statement that the helicopter had a camera crew on it is not relevant. The SSCS Always has Cameras rolling when they are attacking &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 18:21, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> There was no 'escalation' by the authorities on-board using the LRAD on the helicopter. please stop saying that it was. And the LRAD use is AGAINST THE SEA SHEPHERD ACTIVISTS! it fits with the rest of the article. They are the ones defending themselves from the attacks by the SSCS &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 22:34, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Also the link provided is not valid as it is from www.seashpherd.org and containing false information &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 03:38, 2 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> == [[Occupy Wall Street]] resource, [[Businessweek.com]] ==<br /> <br /> http://images.businessweek.com/slideshows/20111222/occupiers-and-evicters/slides/13 Evict: New York police say they used Long Range Acoustic Devices, which blast up to 110 decibels of sound, as megaphones and not as “horrible noisemakers”<br /> <br /> [[Special:Contributions/99.190.86.5|99.190.86.5]] ([[User talk:99.190.86.5|talk]]) 07:48, 28 December 2011 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Long-range_acoustic_device&diff=518450901 Talk:Long-range acoustic device 2012-10-18T04:35:04Z <p>76.16.18.252: /* Is this an LRAD? */ new section</p> <hr /> <div>{{WPMILHIST|class = Start|Weaponry-task-force=yes|US-task-force=yes}}<br /> <br /> == What is ATC? == <br /> Article says, &quot;American companies have been banned from selling arms to China since the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, but the LRAD is described by ATC as a “directed-sounds communications system&quot;.[7]'<br /> -- Perhaps there used to be a description of ATC in previous versions, but in any case it's currently an abbreviation without an explanation and the link it leads to, #7, is a dead link.<br /> What is ATC? [[User:Tharsaile|tharsaile]] ([[User talk:Tharsaile|talk]]) 17:24, 21 March 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Description is Inaccurate==<br /> <br /> WHO keeps changing the USAGE page regarding Paul WAtson and the SSCS? It was the Japanese that used the LRAD in self-defense the why it is worded now makes it look like they were secretly used to attack the activists<br /> <br /> The LRAD uses a phased array which via constructive and destructive interference causes the sound to be more directionalized. It is not just a big speaker as the article suggests. Look at a description on How Stuff Works dot com.<br /> : Actually, read reference #1. Phased array or not, any loudspeaker with the same diameter will have exactly the same (if not more) directivity as this device. Beranek is a much better reference than howstuffworks.<br /> <br /> ----<br /> <br /> I have seen a video about one of these devices<br /> it is designed to only project in a 90 degree or 180 degree<br /> one of these could be taken out by a sniper our somone with a shotgun<br /> [[User:Dudtz|Dudtz]] 9/24/05 12:46 PM EST<br /> <br /> Made the distances consistent, if they are wrong please change them, but a yard is roughly a metre. There are three feet to both a yard and a metre. (Notice: metre, not meter, tee hee hee). [[User:134.226.1.136|134.226.1.136]] 15:38, 6 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> On second thoughts, I'm going to leave the measurements as they are primarily, and just clean up the conversions as per the [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style|Manual Of Style]] [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:14, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Hmmm. I'm still no happy with it, with conversions removed it reads: ''.....33 inches in diameter. At maximum volume, it can emit a warning tone that is 151 decibels at 1 metre....''. It just seems wrong to have inches in one sentance and metres in another. And I'm really not sure what a Watt per metre means (decibel conversion). -- [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:21, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Added a description of the sound. Some early news reports indicated that it emitted an infra-sonic or low frequency sound that knocked people over. That's not the case. A 105 dbSPL signal at low frequencies just isn't enough to do much of anything, other than maybe make somebody want to dance. But 105 dbSPL in the 2k to 5k range is debilitating. Description adapted from <br /> The link to the german website describing the company producing a similar product for Jazz and Classical music concerts no longer works, does anyone know the name of the company or an updated link? -- [[User:Zaf|Zaf]] 04:31, 9 November 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Threshold of pain ==<br /> <br /> &quot;At maximum volume, it can emit a warning tone that is 151 dBSPL (1000 W/m²) at 1 metre, a level that is very capable of permanently damaging hearing, and 50 times the normal human threshold for pain.&quot;<br /> <br /> What threshold of pain figure is being used to arrive at this factor of 50? -- [[User:70.81.118.123|70.81.118.123]] 06:07, 28 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Hmm, actually, that should be 150 dBSPL, which I just fixed. Anyway, the [[Absolute threshold of hearing|threshold of pain]] is described as being around 120 to 140 dB. Since the threshold of hearing is I&lt;sub&gt;0&lt;/sub&gt; = 10&lt;sup&gt;-12&lt;/sup&gt; watts/m&lt;sup&gt;2&lt;/sup&gt;, and I&lt;sub&gt;DB&lt;/sub&gt; = 10 log&lt;sub&gt;10&lt;/sub&gt;( I / I&lt;sub&gt;0&lt;/sub&gt;), the exact figure that would make 150 dB fifty times the threshold of pain would be 133.0 dB.&amp;#160;— [[User:TheKMan|'''&lt;font color=&quot;#0000FF&quot;&gt;The&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#FF0000&quot;&gt;KMan&lt;/font&gt;''']][[User_talk:TheKMan|&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&lt;sup&gt;&lt;u&gt;talk&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] 09:46, 28 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Works for me (though maybe someone should mention that in the article). Thanks. -- [[User:70.81.118.123|70.81.118.123]] 16:04, 29 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Well, I added a link to the [[Absolute threshold of hearing]] article, which shows a range for threshold of pain. I think I'll stick in a number as well. Thanks&amp;#160;— [[User:TheKMan|'''&lt;font color=&quot;#0000FF&quot;&gt;The&lt;/font&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#FF0000&quot;&gt;KMan&lt;/font&gt;''']][[User_talk:TheKMan|&lt;font color=&quot;#000000&quot;&gt;&lt;sup&gt;&lt;u&gt;talk&lt;/u&gt;&lt;/sup&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] 14:00, 30 April 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Focus and frequency==<br /> Quote: &quot;...can emit sound in a 15 to 30° beam (only at high frequency)...&quot;<br /> :Does that mean the LRAD is only capable of a 'beam' that focused when projecting high-frequency sound, or that it is totally incapable of projecting low-frequency sound? -[[User:JHFTC|Toptomcat]] 15:58, 30 October 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> The wave number is NOT defined as 2πf, but rather 2π/λ. I cannot remember the formula used to express speaker directionality but I would like to verify it, given the aforementioned mistake.<br /> <br /> The paragraph which mentions a regular loudspeaker and the wave number is extremely confusing. If this is true, what's the difference between LRAD and a big speaker? What does wave number have to do with it? I'm of the opinion this should be removed or cleaned up to make sense and to fit well with the article.<br /> <br /> == Remove? ==<br /> <br /> The paragraph which mentions a regular loudspeaker and the wave number is extremely confusing. If this is true, what's the difference between LRAD and a big speaker? What does wave number have to do with it? I'm of the opinion this should be removed or cleaned up to make sense and to fit well with the article. [[user:anonymous6494|anonymous6494]] 22:25, 3 February 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> There is no difference, and that's important to point out. It's been claimed by the manufacturer and press that this is somehow a highly directional speaker. But it isn't - at least any more so than any other speaker of equal size. The wave number discussion illustrates it pretty well I think. [[User:JohnDoe4|JohnDoe4]] 19:25, 5 June 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Actually, that section with the numbers comparing it to a loudspeaker should be flagged as weasel words, unless citations can be provided for those numbers, My father is in the military and I experienced one of these things first hand, and while it's not as directional as they advertise, there is a relatively clear and controllable &quot;laser effect&quot; to the sound, definitely less than 30 degrees. If you don't believe me watch the Future Weapons episode on history channel on this thing. It's pretty interesting. The section on it's usefulness is good, but it should be noted that these have been employed in Iraq at security checkpoints since shortly after their release, only issue is, the military hasn't released much info on their use of it. If they have I haven't heard about it. Keep in mind that since this is a government contracted product, and the military never discloses the full capabilities of any of it's equipment, it's probably much louder and long ranged than they say. For example, the Sr-71 blackbird was said to have a top speed of mach 3.5. It completed missions that went from Hawaii to China and back in under an hour. You do the math. &lt;small&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Sublimation440|Sublimation440]] ([[User talk:Sublimation440|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Sublimation440|contribs]]) 02:50, 23 April 2009 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;!-- Template:Unsigned --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Hey all, this is my first Wikipedia edit ever, so sorry if I get this a bit wrong. They're using these at the G20 conference here in Pittsburgh to disrupt the protests, supposedly the first time ever used on civilians in the U.S. There's plenty of primary sources out on the web, this for example;<br /> <br /> http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/09/25/louder-than-bombs-lrad-sonic-cannon-debuts-in-u-s-at-g20-pro/<br /> <br /> Also, a friend of mine has been taking photos and they're usable under creative commons (with attribution), there are two pictures here; <br /> <br /> http://www.flickr.com/photos/iwasaround/3953056814/<br /> <br /> and I think he's got some pictures of them in use as well, that he hasn't uploaded yet (he's still out there taking photos.) If the license isn't suitable for use by Wikipedia I can check if he'll change it to something you can use.<br /> [[Special:Contributions/128.2.179.248|128.2.179.248]] ([[User talk:128.2.179.248|talk]]) 23:03, 25 September 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == car alarm comparison paragraph? ==<br /> <br /> I do not mean to be insulting to the idea of a Long-Range Acoustic Device with the comparison, but at least on video it is indistinguishable from a standard car alarm. I understand that it is more directed and louder in relation to distance, but the philosophy seems to be identical. Since car alarms are proven not to embarrass thieves or attract the attention of passers-by, due to their sound being so common, alarm manufacturers seem to be using the same strategy as Long Range Acoustical Devices: making the alarms so loud as to keep the thief from being able to think straight enough to steal the car. Is it inappropriate to include a paragraph in this article? --[[User:Zachbe|Zachbe]] ([[User talk:Zachbe|talk]]) 07:09, 30 September 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Car alarms do not cause permanent hearing damage or pain. I would think that it would be insanely inappropriate to connect the two. [[Special:Contributions/216.47.130.179|216.47.130.179]] ([[User talk:216.47.130.179|talk]]) 21:30, 11 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> I do not agree. In my opinion car alarms cause both permanent hearing damage and pain, only on a much subtler scale. Your use of the word &quot;insanely&quot; shows your lack of neutral POV on this. Just as you would draw a connection between a one-inch fish and a similar fish that was a hundred inches long, a connection between two items that operate in the same way with only a difference of scale is entirely logical. I'll meet you half-way by not adding a paragraph, but please leave the link at the bottom.--[[Special:Contributions/41.232.94.171|41.232.94.171]] ([[User talk:41.232.94.171|talk]]) 06:20, 14 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :No, the car alarm link is not useful at the bottom or in the middle of the article. Connecting car alarm with LRAD without an expert source is [[WP:SYNTH|synthesis]]. If an expert compares them, put it in the article. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 12:09, 14 October 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Not a phased array? ==<br /> <br /> :The device does not use ultrasound, nor is it a phased array; it uses an array of conventional acoustic tweeters<br /> <br /> Entirely incorrect I think. It is my understanding that the tweeters, acting in phase and thereby addding to each others' magnitude, are a phased array? This is what causes the volume to drop dramatically outside the cone of influence - the tweeters on the outside are of the opposite phase, and therefore cancel out the tweeters on the inside... &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/99.228.57.131|99.228.57.131]] ([[User talk:99.228.57.131|talk]]) 08:51, 28 August 2010 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> == Not ultrasonic? ==<br /> <br /> I saw this device on TV a while ago, according to what they said, it is made of a bunch of very tiny ultrasound speakers that emit sound in the ultrasound range modulating it to produce audible sound, it uses ultrasound because the higher frequency disperses significantly less than frequencies in the audible range. What gives? --[[User:TiagoTiago|TiagoTiago]] ([[User talk:TiagoTiago|talk]]) 02:02, 11 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Sea Shepherd==<br /> THE DEVICES USED IN THE FAROE ISLANDS ARE NOT LRADS THEY WERE DEVICES PLACED IN THE OCEAN THAT EMITTED A TONE THAT THE WHALES HEARD. and stop rewording the portion regarding the Japanese using the LRADs against the SS helicopter. The Heli is breaking aviation laws by flying at the ships, I have already spoken with a Flight Standards Officer regarding this matter, and is used to direct the attacks by the RIBs. He is in no danger as he has noise canceling headphones one. The SSCS did use their &quot;LRAD&quot; when they played Rise of the Valkyrie&quot; when sailing close to one of the Japanese ships. &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 03:00, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> :Please show some published, reliable and verifiable information to back up your assertions. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 04:07, 1 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> http://www.icrwhale.org/eng/100209SS.wmv Video of them using their 'LRAD&quot; The Steve Irwin wasn't even in the Fareo Islands. They rented a ship and made claims that they placed devices in the water to scale the dolphins away from the shore http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/news-100820-1.html THIS DOES NOT REFER TO AN LRAD! <br /> Here is a one of the many photo of the helicopter flying &quot;DANGER CLOSE&quot; to the ships http://www.icrwhale.org/gpandsea-img232.htm You need to stop editting the article to make it seem like the Japanese workers are the aggressors &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 06:33, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> :You are saying that the act of hunting whales in an area declared a whale sanctuary is not an aggressive act? Of course the Sea Shepherd takes aggressive action against whalers, trying to prevent them from finding and killing whales. Your link to www.icrwhale.org is not a reliable source, it is the false 'research' organization which exists solely to hunt whales as part of a pretense to engage in research about them, presumably by killing them and making them into dog food and lubricants. Fine research, that.<br /> :Your link to a photograph of a helicopter does not have any relevance to this article about LRAD. The photo could be faked, and it is presented by www.icrwhale.org, not by a news agency or a scholarly source. To be relevant, the helicopter's distance must be commented on by [[WP:RS|reliable]] and [[WP:V|verifiable]] sources.<br /> :Your link to www.seashepherd.org is not reliable either, as it is self-reporting and not a neutral news source, but in any case the underwater loudspeakers they discuss in that article are not LRAD, so I will take that out of the article. [[User:Binksternet|Binksternet]] ([[User talk:Binksternet|talk]]) 17:01, 1 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> The title against/by whalers NEEDS TO BE CHANGED. The LRAD is being used against the Sea Shepherd Activists. <br /> THE PHOTO IS NOT FAKED! Why do all SScS supports say the ICR is faking these photos. The SSCS are the ones that have faked photos in the past. Also the statement that the helicopter had a camera crew on it is not relevant. The SSCS Always has Cameras rolling when they are attacking &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 18:21, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> There was no 'escalation' by the authorities on-board using the LRAD on the helicopter. please stop saying that it was. And the LRAD use is AGAINST THE SEA SHEPHERD ACTIVISTS! it fits with the rest of the article. They are the ones defending themselves from the attacks by the SSCS &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 22:34, 1 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Also the link provided is not valid as it is from www.seashpherd.org and containing false information &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/72.24.218.36|72.24.218.36]] ([[User talk:72.24.218.36|talk]]) 03:38, 2 January 2011 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> == [[Occupy Wall Street]] resource, [[Businessweek.com]] ==<br /> <br /> http://images.businessweek.com/slideshows/20111222/occupiers-and-evicters/slides/13 Evict: New York police say they used Long Range Acoustic Devices, which blast up to 110 decibels of sound, as megaphones and not as “horrible noisemakers”<br /> <br /> [[Special:Contributions/99.190.86.5|99.190.86.5]] ([[User talk:99.190.86.5|talk]]) 07:48, 28 December 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Is this an LRAD? ==<br /> <br /> Can anyone confirm that this is an LRAD being used at a protest in Will County IL?<br /> <br /> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6WkcvFc-78w&amp;feature=autoplay&amp;list=UU3hkeAXkYAPiL-9qqlhmlmQ&amp;playnext=3</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:The_Walt_Disney_Company&diff=486953781 Talk:The Walt Disney Company 2012-04-12T05:45:41Z <p>76.16.18.252: /* Figment */</p> <hr /> <div>{{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |counter = 1<br /> |minthreadsleft = 1<br /> |minthreadstoarchive = 1<br /> |algo = old(60d)<br /> |archive = Talk:The Walt Disney Company/Archive/%(year)d<br /> }}{{ArticleHistory<br /> |action1=FAC<br /> |action1date=13:56, 2 December 2010<br /> |action1link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/The Walt Disney Company/archive1<br /> |action1result=not promoted<br /> |action1oldid=400121066<br /> |currentstatus=FFAC<br /> }}<br /> {{Talk header}}<br /> {{IEP assignment}}<br /> {{todo}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject California|class=c|importance=High|unref=no|southerncalifornia=yes|southerncalifornia-importance=High|la=yes|la-importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Companies|class=c| importance=top|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Film|American-task-force=yes|Filmmaking-task-force=yes|class=Start|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Animation|class=c|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|B-Class-6=yes|importance=Top|american-animation=yes|american-animation-importance=Top}}<br /> {{WikiProject United States|class=C|importance=Mid|USanimation=yes|USanimation-importance=Top|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Disney|class=c|importance=Top|unref=no|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Media|class=c|importance=High|unref=no}}<br /> }}<br /> {{archive box|search=yes|image=[[Image:File-manager.svg|35px]]|<br /> * [[/Archive/2003|2003]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2004|2004]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2005|2005]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2006|2006]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2007|2007]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2008|2008]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2009|2009]] <br /> * [[/Archive/2010|2010]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2011|2011]]<br /> * }}<br /> <br /> == [[Copyright Term Extension Act]] ==<br /> <br /> It seems that the company played an important role in the &quot;anti-PD&quot; :-) lobbying, but this fact is not even mentioned. — [[User:Mikhail Ryazanov|Mikhail Ryazanov]] ([[User talk:Mikhail Ryazanov|talk]]) 09:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Something that specific should be added to [[Criticism of The Walt Disney Company]] with perhaps a one-sentence summary aded here. --[[User:FuriousFreddy|FuriousFreddy]] ([[User talk:FuriousFreddy|talk]]) 07:26, 13 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Figment ==<br /> <br /> Is there any truth to Figment from Epcot actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are stimulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention, just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 01:21, 11 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :If you're a physicist, you should know that purple is also not a &quot;real&quot; color, as it's the combination of red and blue wavelengths. Regardless, any color our eyes can perceive is a real color, whether it represents a single wavelength of light or not. [[User:LtPowers|Powers]] &lt;sup&gt;&lt;small&gt;&lt;small&gt;[[User talk:LtPowers|T]]&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/sup&gt; 23:24, 11 April 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Good point! Purple is the range of extra extra-sensory color on the old RYB color system used by painters before Albert Munsell made the scientific color scales RGB and CMYK in which magenta is the extra-sensory color. [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :Still the point remains, was Figment purposfully made purple/magenta with the understanding that the color is only created in our mind? Does anyone even know where to start looking for this information? Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:The_Walt_Disney_Company&diff=486953718 Talk:The Walt Disney Company 2012-04-12T05:44:59Z <p>76.16.18.252: /* Figment */</p> <hr /> <div>{{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |counter = 1<br /> |minthreadsleft = 1<br /> |minthreadstoarchive = 1<br /> |algo = old(60d)<br /> |archive = Talk:The Walt Disney Company/Archive/%(year)d<br /> }}{{ArticleHistory<br /> |action1=FAC<br /> |action1date=13:56, 2 December 2010<br /> |action1link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/The Walt Disney Company/archive1<br /> |action1result=not promoted<br /> |action1oldid=400121066<br /> |currentstatus=FFAC<br /> }}<br /> {{Talk header}}<br /> {{IEP assignment}}<br /> {{todo}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject California|class=c|importance=High|unref=no|southerncalifornia=yes|southerncalifornia-importance=High|la=yes|la-importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Companies|class=c| importance=top|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Film|American-task-force=yes|Filmmaking-task-force=yes|class=Start|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Animation|class=c|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|B-Class-6=yes|importance=Top|american-animation=yes|american-animation-importance=Top}}<br /> {{WikiProject United States|class=C|importance=Mid|USanimation=yes|USanimation-importance=Top|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Disney|class=c|importance=Top|unref=no|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Media|class=c|importance=High|unref=no}}<br /> }}<br /> {{archive box|search=yes|image=[[Image:File-manager.svg|35px]]|<br /> * [[/Archive/2003|2003]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2004|2004]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2005|2005]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2006|2006]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2007|2007]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2008|2008]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2009|2009]] <br /> * [[/Archive/2010|2010]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2011|2011]]<br /> * }}<br /> <br /> == [[Copyright Term Extension Act]] ==<br /> <br /> It seems that the company played an important role in the &quot;anti-PD&quot; :-) lobbying, but this fact is not even mentioned. — [[User:Mikhail Ryazanov|Mikhail Ryazanov]] ([[User talk:Mikhail Ryazanov|talk]]) 09:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Something that specific should be added to [[Criticism of The Walt Disney Company]] with perhaps a one-sentence summary aded here. --[[User:FuriousFreddy|FuriousFreddy]] ([[User talk:FuriousFreddy|talk]]) 07:26, 13 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Figment ==<br /> <br /> Is there any truth to Figment from Epcot actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are stimulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention, just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 01:21, 11 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :If you're a physicist, you should know that purple is also not a &quot;real&quot; color, as it's the combination of red and blue wavelengths. Regardless, any color our eyes can perceive is a real color, whether it represents a single wavelength of light or not. [[User:LtPowers|Powers]] &lt;sup&gt;&lt;small&gt;&lt;small&gt;[[User talk:LtPowers|T]]&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/sup&gt; 23:24, 11 April 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Good point! Purple is the range of extra extra-sensory color on the old RYB color system used by painters before Albert Munsell made a scientific color scales RGB and CMYK in which magenta is the extra-sensory color. [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :Still the point remains, was Figment purposfully made purple/magenta with the understanding that the color is only created in our mind? Does anyone even know where to start looking for this information? Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:The_Walt_Disney_Company&diff=486953652 Talk:The Walt Disney Company 2012-04-12T05:44:19Z <p>76.16.18.252: /* Figment */</p> <hr /> <div>{{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |counter = 1<br /> |minthreadsleft = 1<br /> |minthreadstoarchive = 1<br /> |algo = old(60d)<br /> |archive = Talk:The Walt Disney Company/Archive/%(year)d<br /> }}{{ArticleHistory<br /> |action1=FAC<br /> |action1date=13:56, 2 December 2010<br /> |action1link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/The Walt Disney Company/archive1<br /> |action1result=not promoted<br /> |action1oldid=400121066<br /> |currentstatus=FFAC<br /> }}<br /> {{Talk header}}<br /> {{IEP assignment}}<br /> {{todo}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject California|class=c|importance=High|unref=no|southerncalifornia=yes|southerncalifornia-importance=High|la=yes|la-importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Companies|class=c| importance=top|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Film|American-task-force=yes|Filmmaking-task-force=yes|class=Start|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Animation|class=c|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|B-Class-6=yes|importance=Top|american-animation=yes|american-animation-importance=Top}}<br /> {{WikiProject United States|class=C|importance=Mid|USanimation=yes|USanimation-importance=Top|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Disney|class=c|importance=Top|unref=no|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Media|class=c|importance=High|unref=no}}<br /> }}<br /> {{archive box|search=yes|image=[[Image:File-manager.svg|35px]]|<br /> * [[/Archive/2003|2003]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2004|2004]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2005|2005]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2006|2006]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2007|2007]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2008|2008]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2009|2009]] <br /> * [[/Archive/2010|2010]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2011|2011]]<br /> * }}<br /> <br /> == [[Copyright Term Extension Act]] ==<br /> <br /> It seems that the company played an important role in the &quot;anti-PD&quot; :-) lobbying, but this fact is not even mentioned. — [[User:Mikhail Ryazanov|Mikhail Ryazanov]] ([[User talk:Mikhail Ryazanov|talk]]) 09:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Something that specific should be added to [[Criticism of The Walt Disney Company]] with perhaps a one-sentence summary aded here. --[[User:FuriousFreddy|FuriousFreddy]] ([[User talk:FuriousFreddy|talk]]) 07:26, 13 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Figment ==<br /> <br /> Is there any truth to Figment from Epcot actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are stimulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention, just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 01:21, 11 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :If you're a physicist, you should know that purple is also not a &quot;real&quot; color, as it's the combination of red and blue wavelengths. Regardless, any color our eyes can perceive is a real color, whether it represents a single wavelength of light or not. [[User:LtPowers|Powers]] &lt;sup&gt;&lt;small&gt;&lt;small&gt;[[User talk:LtPowers|T]]&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/sup&gt; 23:24, 11 April 2012 (UTC):Good point! Purple is the range of extra extra-sensory color on the old RYB color system used by painters before Albert Munsell made a scientific color scales RGB and CMYK in which magenta is the extra-sensory color. [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :Still the point remains, was Figment purposfully made purple/magenta with the understanding that the color is only created in our mind? Does anyone even know where to start looking for this information? Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:The_Walt_Disney_Company&diff=486953596 Talk:The Walt Disney Company 2012-04-12T05:43:42Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |counter = 1<br /> |minthreadsleft = 1<br /> |minthreadstoarchive = 1<br /> |algo = old(60d)<br /> |archive = Talk:The Walt Disney Company/Archive/%(year)d<br /> }}{{ArticleHistory<br /> |action1=FAC<br /> |action1date=13:56, 2 December 2010<br /> |action1link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/The Walt Disney Company/archive1<br /> |action1result=not promoted<br /> |action1oldid=400121066<br /> |currentstatus=FFAC<br /> }}<br /> {{Talk header}}<br /> {{IEP assignment}}<br /> {{todo}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject California|class=c|importance=High|unref=no|southerncalifornia=yes|southerncalifornia-importance=High|la=yes|la-importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Companies|class=c| importance=top|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Film|American-task-force=yes|Filmmaking-task-force=yes|class=Start|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Animation|class=c|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|B-Class-6=yes|importance=Top|american-animation=yes|american-animation-importance=Top}}<br /> {{WikiProject United States|class=C|importance=Mid|USanimation=yes|USanimation-importance=Top|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Disney|class=c|importance=Top|unref=no|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Media|class=c|importance=High|unref=no}}<br /> }}<br /> {{archive box|search=yes|image=[[Image:File-manager.svg|35px]]|<br /> * [[/Archive/2003|2003]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2004|2004]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2005|2005]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2006|2006]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2007|2007]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2008|2008]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2009|2009]] <br /> * [[/Archive/2010|2010]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2011|2011]]<br /> * }}<br /> <br /> == [[Copyright Term Extension Act]] ==<br /> <br /> It seems that the company played an important role in the &quot;anti-PD&quot; :-) lobbying, but this fact is not even mentioned. — [[User:Mikhail Ryazanov|Mikhail Ryazanov]] ([[User talk:Mikhail Ryazanov|talk]]) 09:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Something that specific should be added to [[Criticism of The Walt Disney Company]] with perhaps a one-sentence summary aded here. --[[User:FuriousFreddy|FuriousFreddy]] ([[User talk:FuriousFreddy|talk]]) 07:26, 13 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Figment ==<br /> <br /> Is there any truth to Figment from Epcot actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are stimulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention, just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 01:21, 11 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :If you're a physicist, you should know that purple is also not a &quot;real&quot; color, as it's the combination of red and blue wavelengths. Regardless, any color our eyes can perceive is a real color, whether it represents a single wavelength of light or not. [[User:LtPowers|Powers]] &lt;sup&gt;&lt;small&gt;&lt;small&gt;[[User talk:LtPowers|T]]&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/small&gt;&lt;/sup&gt; 23:24, 11 April 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Good point! Purple is the range of extra extra-sensory color on the old RYB color system used by painters before Albert Munsell made a scientific color scales RGB and CMYK in which magenta is the extra-sensory color. [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> :Still the point remains, was Figment purposfully made purple/magenta with the understanding that the color is only created in our mind? Does anyone even know where to start looking for this information? Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 05:43, 12 April 2012 (UTC)Ben</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:The_Walt_Disney_Company&diff=486730605 Talk:The Walt Disney Company 2012-04-11T01:22:02Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |counter = 1<br /> |minthreadsleft = 1<br /> |minthreadstoarchive = 1<br /> |algo = old(60d)<br /> |archive = Talk:The Walt Disney Company/Archive/%(year)d<br /> }}{{ArticleHistory<br /> |action1=FAC<br /> |action1date=13:56, 2 December 2010<br /> |action1link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/The Walt Disney Company/archive1<br /> |action1result=not promoted<br /> |action1oldid=400121066<br /> |currentstatus=FFAC<br /> }}<br /> {{Talk header}}<br /> {{IEP assignment}}<br /> {{todo}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject California|class=c|importance=High|unref=no|southerncalifornia=yes|southerncalifornia-importance=High|la=yes|la-importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Companies|class=c| importance=top|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Film|American-task-force=yes|Filmmaking-task-force=yes|class=Start|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|unref=no}}<br /> {{WikiProject Animation|class=c|B-Class-1=yes|B-Class-2=yes|B-Class-3=no|B-Class-4=no|B-Class-5=yes|B-Class-6=yes|importance=Top|american-animation=yes|american-animation-importance=Top}}<br /> {{WikiProject United States|class=C|importance=Mid|USanimation=yes|USanimation-importance=Top|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Disney|class=c|importance=Top|unref=no|listas=Walt Disney Company, The}}<br /> {{WikiProject Media|class=c|importance=High|unref=no}}<br /> }}<br /> {{archive box|search=yes|image=[[Image:File-manager.svg|35px]]|<br /> * [[/Archive/2003|2003]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2004|2004]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2005|2005]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2006|2006]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2007|2007]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2008|2008]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2009|2009]] <br /> * [[/Archive/2010|2010]]<br /> * [[/Archive/2011|2011]]<br /> * }}<br /> <br /> == Figment ==<br /> <br /> Is there any truth to Figment from Epcot actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are stimulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention, just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 01:21, 11 April 2012 (UTC)Ben<br /> <br /> == [[Copyright Term Extension Act]] ==<br /> <br /> It seems that the company played an important role in the &quot;anti-PD&quot; :-) lobbying, but this fact is not even mentioned. — [[User:Mikhail Ryazanov|Mikhail Ryazanov]] ([[User talk:Mikhail Ryazanov|talk]]) 09:30, 20 January 2012 (UTC)<br /> :Something that specific should be added to [[Criticism of The Walt Disney Company]] with perhaps a one-sentence summary aded here. --[[User:FuriousFreddy|FuriousFreddy]] ([[User talk:FuriousFreddy|talk]]) 07:26, 13 February 2012 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Intelligence_quotient&diff=486705019 Talk:Intelligence quotient 2012-04-10T22:08:15Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{Race and intelligence talk page notice}}<br /> {{oldafdfull| date = 3 March 2009 (UTC) | result = '''speedy keep''' | page = Intelligence quotient }}<br /> {{talk header|search=yes}}<br /> {{User:MiszaBot/config<br /> |archiveheader = {{aan}}<br /> |maxarchivesize = 100K<br /> |counter = 5<br /> |minthreadsleft = 4<br /> |algo = old(90d)<br /> |archive = Talk:Intelligence quotient/Archive %(counter)d<br /> }}<br /> {{Auto archiving notice |bot=MiszaBot I |age=3 |units=months }}<br /> {{controversial}}<br /> {{WikiProjectBannerShell|1=<br /> {{WikiProject Psychology|class=B|importance=High}}<br /> {{WikiProject Sociology|class=B|importance=Mid}}<br /> }}<br /> <br /> == I think that this link should be included into the article please help link it ==<br /> <br /> I think that the jobs section may benifit from a inner-wikipedia link to the Griggs v. Duke Power Co. were the supreme court found that under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, if such IQ tests disparately impact ethnic minority groups, businesses must demonstrate that such tests are &quot;reasonably related&quot; to the job for which the test is required. Basically you can not use an IQ test to determine job placement. ~Thanks<br /> <br /> == I will be adding numerous references and bibliography entries. ==<br /> <br /> Last year I began a major revision of a working paper project (begun in 2006, based on shorter research notes I began compiling as early as 1993) largely on this Wikipedia topic. As the talk page templates note, &quot;This is a controversial topic that may be under dispute.&quot; As a courtesy to the editors who have long been here, I will note that I will begin adding the dozens of books and articles I have at hand for my non-Wikipedia project (a literature review for popular audiences interested in the primary source literature on IQ testing) to this Wikipedia article. At first I will add books and articles from various points of view to the bibliography. Then I will add more references to verify the statements that have already long stood in the article. (I hope to add specific page numbers to both the references I add and the existing references that I am able to look up here.) At some length, I expect to expand sections with additional facts, perhaps add a few subsections, and from time to time do substantive edits under the NPOV principle, as the sources report various points of view. Thanks to all of you who have already worked on this very detailed article. I am lucky to have access to a very comprehensive academic library at which I have circulating privileges, so I am delighted to add some V and NPOV to various Wikipedia projects. [[User:WeijiBaikeBianji|WeijiBaikeBianji]] ([[User talk:WeijiBaikeBianji|talk]]) 03:42, 1 June 2010 (UTC)<br /> :That sounds like a great job. I'm looking forward to reading your additions. Good luck to you! :) [[User:Lova_Falk|&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;&lt;span style=&quot;font-family:Segoe Print;color:#e75e03&quot;&gt;'''Lova Falk'''&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] [[User talk:Lova Falk|&lt;font size=&quot;2&quot;&gt;&lt;span style=&quot;font-family:Segoe Print;color:#336699&quot;&gt;talk&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/font&gt;]] 08:19, 1 June 2010 (UTC)<br /> :: Here is an update on that project. &lt;!-- [[User:DoNotArchiveUntil]] 03:12, 8 August 2020 (UTC) --&gt; You may find it helpful while reading or editing articles to look at a bibliography of [[User:WeijiBaikeBianji/IntelligenceCitations | Intelligence Citations]], posted for the use of all Wikipedians who have occasion to edit articles on human intelligence and related issues. I happen to have circulating access to a huge academic research library at a university with an active research program in these issues (and to another library that is one of the ten largest public library systems in the United States) and have been researching these issues since 1989. You are welcome to use these citations for your own research. You can help other Wikipedians by [[User_talk:WeijiBaikeBianji/IntelligenceCitations | suggesting new sources]] through comments on that page. It will be extremely helpful for articles on human intelligence to edit them according to the [[WP:MEDRS | Wikipedia standards for reliable sources for medicine-related articles]], as it is important to get these issues as well verified as possible. -- [[User:WeijiBaikeBianji|WeijiBaikeBianji]] ([[User talk:WeijiBaikeBianji|talk]]) 17:22, 30 June 2010 (UTC) <br /> <br /> ::: I have begun substantive edits to this article based on sources that other Wikipedians can check in the [[User:WeijiBaikeBianji/IntelligenceCitations | Intelligence Citations]] list. All of you are encouraged to suggest new sources for that list, which will be useful for editing quite a few articles on Wikipedia. -- [[User:WeijiBaikeBianji|WeijiBaikeBianji]] ([[User talk:WeijiBaikeBianji|talk]]) 15:48, 28 July 2010 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == g and Cattell-Horn-Carroll theory not modern theories? ==<br /> <br /> They are the mainstream theories in IQ research and Cattell-Horn-Carroll theory is a new as any of the others mentioned. I propose correcting this. [[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 16:56, 3 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> :&quot;Spearman's ''g'' theory was the dominant theory of intelligence.&quot; It still is. [[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 17:10, 3 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Real-life accomplishments ==<br /> <br /> I tried to find some of the contents of the 'Real-life accomplishments' section in the references provided. Not helped by that no page numbers are given as I have not been able to find any of them in the cites given. Are they actually there does anyone know who has better access than google preview? [[User:Dmcq|Dmcq]] ([[User talk:Dmcq|talk]]) 14:13, 5 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> :I have the book by Kaufman. The page numbers are pages 126 and 132.[[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 14:33, 5 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> ::Thanks, wanted to check a recent edit and I couldn't. [[User:Dmcq|Dmcq]] ([[User talk:Dmcq|talk]]) 15:33, 5 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Removed material ==<br /> <br /> &quot;[[Heritability]]&quot; is defined as the proportion of [[variance]] in a [[trait (biology)|trait]] which is attributable to [[genotype]] within a defined population in a specific environment. A heritability of 1 indicates that all variation is genetic in origin and a heritability of 0 indicates that none of the variation is genetic. There are a number of points to consider when interpreting heritability.&lt;ref name=&quot;lewontin 2&quot;&gt;International Journal of Epidemiology, Volume 35, Issue 3, June 2006. See reprint of Leowontin's 1974 article &quot;The analysis of variance and the analysis of causes&quot; and 2006 commentaries: http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/content/35/3.toc&lt;/ref&gt; Some examples:<br /> * Heritability measures the proportion of ''variation'' in a trait that can be attributed to genes, and not the proportion of a trait caused by genes. Thus, if the environment relevant to a given trait changes in a way that affects all members of the population equally, the mean value of the trait will change without any change in its heritability (because the variation or differences among individuals in the population will stay the same). This has evidently happened for height: the heritability of stature is high, but average heights continue to increase.&lt;ref name=&quot;Neisser95&quot; /&gt; Thus, even in developed nations, a high heritability of a trait does not necessarily mean that average group differences are due to genes.&lt;ref name=&quot;Neisser95&quot; /&gt;&lt;ref&gt;{{cite journal |last1=Brooks-Gunn |first1=J. |last2=Klebanov |first2=P. K. |last3=Duncan |first3=G. J. |title=Ethnic Differences in Children's Intelligence Test Scores: Role of Economic Deprivation, Home Environment, and Maternal Characteristics |journal=Child Development |volume=67 |issue=2 |pages=396–408 |year=1996 |pmid=8625720 |doi=10.2307/1131822 |jstor=1131822}}&lt;/ref&gt; Some have gone further, and used height as an example in order to argue that &quot;even highly heritable traits can be strongly manipulated by the environment, so heritability has little if anything to do with controllability.&quot;&lt;ref name=&quot;JohnsonBouchard2009&quot;&gt;{{cite journal | author = Johnson, Wendy; Turkheimer, Eric; Gottesman, Irving I.; Bouchard Jr., Thomas | year = 2009 | title = Beyond Heritability: Twin Studies in Behavioral Research. | journal = Current Directions in Psychological Science | volume = 18 | issue = 4 | pages = 217–220 | doi = 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2009.01639.x | pmc = 2899491 | pmid = 20625474}}&lt;/ref&gt; However, others argue that IQ is highly stable during life and has been largely resistant to interventions aimed to change it long-term and substantially.&lt;ref&gt;Sesardic, 2005. Making sense of heritability&lt;/ref&gt;&lt;ref&gt;Gottfredson. L. S. (2007). Flynn, Ceci, and Turkheimer on race and intelligence: Opening moves. Cato Unbound, November 26.&lt;/ref&gt;&lt;ref name=RJ2010/&gt;<br /> * A common error is to assume that a heritability figure is necessarily unchangeable. The value of heritability can change if the impact of environment (or of genes) in the population is substantially altered.&lt;ref name=&quot;Neisser95&quot; /&gt; If the environmental variation encountered by different individuals increases, then the heritability figure would decrease. On the other hand, if everyone had the same environment, then heritability would be 100%. The population in developing nations often have more diverse environments than in developed nations. This would mean that heritability figures would be lower in developing nations. Another example is [[phenylketonuria]] which previously caused mental retardation for everyone who had this genetic disorder and thus had a heritability of 100%. Today, this can be prevented by following a modified diet which has lowered heritability.<br /> * A high heritability of a trait does not mean that environmental effects such as learning are not involved. Vocabulary size, for example, is very substantially heritable (and highly correlated with general intelligence) although every word in an individual's vocabulary is learned. In a society in which plenty of words are available in everyone's environment, especially for individuals who are motivated to seek them out, the number of words that individuals actually learn depends to a considerable extent on their genetic predispositions and thus heritability is high.&lt;ref name=&quot;Neisser95&quot; /&gt;<br /> * Since heritability increases during childhood and adolescence, and even increases greatly between 16–20 years of age and adulthood, one should be cautious drawing conclusions regarding the role of genetics and environment from studies where the participants are not followed until they are adults. Furthermore, there may be differences regarding the effects on ''g'' and on non-g factors, with ''g'' possibly being harder to affect and environmental interventions disproportionately affecting non-''g'' factors.&lt;ref name=RJ2010&gt;{{cite doi|10.2174/1874350101003010009}}&lt;/ref&gt;<br /> ::See no good reason for removing this material so I propose restoring it. [[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 10:38, 6 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> [[Regression towards the mean]] is a statistical phenomenon that occurs when an outcome is determined by many independent factors. If an outcome is extreme, then this occurred because most of the independent factors agreed by chance. This is unlikely to occur again so to the next outcome is likely to be less extreme. If IQ is determined by many factors, genetic and/or environmental, then they must mostly agree in the same direction in order to produce an extreme IQ. The child of a person with an extreme IQ is unlikely to have all the factors agree so similarly so the child is on average likely to have a less extreme IQ.<br /> <br /> People in professional occupations have on average 25 points higher IQ than unskilled workers. For their children the difference is 21 points. This is in itself not evidence for genetics or environment since the environment for the children likely differs greatly with it on average being more stimulating for the children of professionals.&lt;ref name=Kaufman2009/&gt;<br /> ::See no good reason for removing this either. [[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 10:42, 6 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == &quot;Criticism&quot; by Binet ==<br /> <br /> The test created by Binet is very different from today. He only looked at children, the test was more of a knowledge or skill test, it produced a mental age instead of normalized scores, and so on. An enormous amount of development and research have been done since. As such this &quot;criticism&quot; is only of historical interest and should be removed. [[User:Acadēmica Orientālis|Acadēmica Orientālis]] ([[User talk:Acadēmica Orientālis|talk]]) 11:33, 6 February 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Poor use of mathematical and statistical concepts ==<br /> <br /> This article, unfortunately, conflates the concepts of &quot;mean&quot;, &quot;median&quot; and &quot;mode.&quot; Specifically, in the introduction, a 100 IQ is described as being the &quot;average (or mean)&quot; score on a standardized test designed to measure IQ. Later in the article, a 100 score is presented as being the median score. And in other parts a 100 IQ score is described as the most usual score in a population. The problem: the median score is not the same as the mean score, nor the mode score as usually understood. Worse yet, the concepts of &quot;median&quot; and &quot;mode&quot; scores better approximate the ordinary concept of the average, while in the introduction, the &quot;average&quot; is described as the arithmetic mean (which departs from the actual scoring of IQ tests - sorry, no references - this is a rushed commentary). The mean (the arithmetic mean) is basically the sum of the scores of a sample, divided by the number in the sample. The median is the score of an individual in a population, where half of the rest of the population scores above, and the other half scores below. Finally, the mode score is the most likely score in a population. None of these concepts is equivalent to the other, but the prose frequently conflates these concepts. In short, this article needs to get these concepts straight, and get it straight what a 100 IQ means. <br /> <br /> [[Special:Contributions/174.29.213.67|174.29.213.67]] ([[User talk:174.29.213.67|talk]]) 11:51, 5 March 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :They are all exactly the same for IQ because of the way it is set up. [[User:Dmcq|Dmcq]] ([[User talk:Dmcq|talk]]) 13:41, 5 March 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::While using all three terms without further explanation is confusing, you are correct that with respect to [[normal distribution]]s the mean, median, and mode are identical by formulation. FTA:<br /> :::&quot;The parameter μ is at the same time the mean, the median and the mode of the normal distribution.&quot;<br /> ::Perhaps this might be worth pointing out here. [[User:Bakkster Man|Bakkster Man]] ([[User talk:Bakkster Man|talk]]) 15:46, 5 March 2012 (UTC)<br /> <br /> The question is NOT whether we need a lesson in elementary statistics, but how the test makers define their parameters (in this case IQ). To wit:<br /> <br /> ::::The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales: Fifth Edition<br /> <br /> ::::The fifth edition of the Stanford-Binet (SB5; Roid, 2003a) was designed for administration<br /> ::::to assessees as young as 2 and as old as 85 (or older). The test yields a number<br /> ::::of composite scores, including a Full Scale IQ derived from the administration of ten<br /> ::::subtests. Subtest scores all have a '''mean''' of 10 and a standard deviation of 3. Other composite<br /> ::::scores are an Abbreviated Battery IQ score, a Verbal IQ score, and a Nonverbal<br /> ::::IQ score. All composite scores have a '''mean''' set at 100 and a standard deviation of 15.<br /> <br /> :::::Source: Psychological Testing and Assessment: An Introduction to Tests and Measurement 7th Edition<br /> ::::: Cohen−Swerdlik<br /> ::::: McGraw-Hill Copyright ©2009 by The McGraw−Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved<br /> ::::: http://www.primisonline.com<br /> [[User:N0w8st8s|N0w8st8s]] ([[User talk:N0w8st8s|talk]]) 09:58, 5 April 2012 (UTC)n0w8st8s<br /> <br /> == Peer Review for [[Wonderlic Test]] ==<br /> <br /> Hello All! I am in need of peer reviewers for the article on the [[Wonderlic Test]]. Since the Wonderlic is an intelligence test, this seems a good place to solicit peer reviewers. Any and all help would be much appreciated. Thanks for your time. [[User:Mdwilliams2|Mdwilliams2]] ([[User talk:Mdwilliams2|talk]]) 21:52, 29 March 2012 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Figment_(Disney)&diff=486701403 Talk:Figment (Disney) 2012-04-10T21:46:24Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{WP Disney}}<br /> {{WikiProject Walt Disney World|class=Start|importance=Low}}<br /> {{WikiProject Fictional characters|class=Start}}<br /> <br /> This is not a stub article. It contains, more or less, the sum total of information about this one character who appears in one attraction in one theme park. There's not much more you could say about him unless you wanted to start summarizing the ride itself. [[User:Brian Kendig|Brian Kendig]] 22:17, 7 Apr 2004 (UTC)<br /> <br /> I &lt;3 figment!<br /> <br /> == Is he really magenta? ==<br /> Is there any truth to Figment actually being magenta. I ask because magenta is not a real color (I'm a physicist trust me)real colors can be made of a pure frequency, magenta is the color our mind creates when our yellow and blue cone receptors are simulated in our eyes. Therefore making magenta a FIGMENT of our imagination. If anyone was going to make an inside joke that is related to science it would be Disney. I don't know if this was the actual intention or just a happy coincidence, or if this is just me reading to much into this and he is really just purple. ~Thanks<br /> <br /> ==&lt;3 Figment!==<br /> <br /> Is it against Disney policy to reproduce pictures of him or the ride here?<br /> <br /> == First Appearance ==<br /> <br /> I'm pretty sure that Figment's first appearance in something (not in the attraction itself, just presented) was at [[Magic Journeys]], per [http://www.waltdatedworld.bravepages.com/id100.htm]. However, Magic Journeys was open until 1986, and they could have added Figment on to the opening after Journey Into Imagination started. [[User:1ne|1ne]] 04:28, 15 August 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :No, Figment was just on the sign of the attraction. Magic Journeys was actually wholly unrelated to JII, about a group of kids exploring their dreams. There was actually a Dreamfinder based 3D film that was made in case Magic Journeys wasn't ready in time, but in the end was never used. Figment did appear in some educational films though.--[[User:FigmentJedi|FigmentJedi]] 22:40, 20 August 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Still, his first appearance wasn't in JII then. Appearing on a sign is still an appearance. [[User:1ne|1ne]] 00:43, 2 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> :::Of course, Figment appeared in educational films as well around Epcot's opening and of course in various appearances in Epcot Opening coverage, such as on the Today Show with Dreamfinder. __[[User:FigmentJedi|FigmentJedi]] 01:34, 26 November 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Irrelevant stuff==<br /> <br /> In the early days, am I right in remembering that Dreamfinder and Figment used to greet the public, esp when Disney characters weren't allowed to. If so, is it worth mentioning this in the article? [[User:TimothyJacobson|TimothyJacobson]] ([[User talk:TimothyJacobson|talk]]) 00:45, 1 March 2008 (UTC)<br /> <br /> In one version of HISTA, didn't Figment have a cameo at the end in which he said &quot;can they imagine too&quot;? [[User:TimothyJacobson|TimothyJacobson]] ([[User talk:TimothyJacobson|talk]]) 00:45, 1 March 2008 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Magenta&diff=486564988 Talk:Magenta 2012-04-10T04:57:00Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{WikiProject Color|class=start|importance=high}}<br /> == Magenta wraps between... ==<br /> <br /> It says in this article that magenta wraps between red and blue in the color wheel. However, the colors at the edges of the spectrum are red and violet. Any clarifications?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 00:47, 28 Mar 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The spectrum shown in the article is incorrect, as it shows a ''real'' violet &amp;mdash; but violet is extraspectral too! This is probably both an overcorrection of the imperfect blue used by standard monitors and a reflection of the mistake to equate the spectrum with the colours of the rainbow, which is an extreme simplification--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:05, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> ::Show that the colors of the spectrum are '''not the same''' as the colors of the rainbow. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 13:36, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> :::Simply look at a rainbow and it will show you :o).--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 12:09, 11 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> In my defintion, violet is spectral, with a wavelength of about 400nm, see also [http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov/EDDOCS/Wavelengths_for_Colors.html]. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 07:06, 2005 Jun 21 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :If we define it as such; it's correct &amp;mdash; by definition :o). But others define the same hue as &quot;blue&quot;, the blue referred to in &quot;wraps between blue and red&quot;. One cause of confusion. And the hue in the spectrum illustrated in the article is not the 400 nm one. Can't you feel the red vibes? ;o)--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 09:15, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> No, I'm red-green blind. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 09:58, 2005 Jun 21 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ~:o)--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:40, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : Most definitions, including that given by Hunt's 2004 book ''The Reproduction of Color'', ([http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/color1.html#huenames as cited here]) consider “violet” to include both the edge of the visible spectrum, and some extra-spectral colors. Hunt calls the range between 400nm and the complement of 565nm &quot;bluish purple&quot; or &quot;violet&quot;. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 20:27, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> My question is based on the idea that the &quot;color&quot; of light is based on its frequency (and with a constant velocity also its wavelength) and that when you add two colors of light you should get a new color that is a interference pattern of the two waves. Now this idea follows when you combine red and green light and the mixture of the low frequency red and the medium frequency green combine to produce a yellow that is inbetween the low and medium frequency. The same is true for mixing a high frequency blue and medium frequency resulting in a cyan. Why then does mixing a high frequency and a low frequency result in magenta and not a medium frequency green. Is this because magenta is not a true tone? &lt;span style=&quot;font-size: smaller;&quot; class=&quot;autosigned&quot;&gt;— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/76.16.18.252|76.16.18.252]] ([[User talk:76.16.18.252|talk]]) 04:53, 10 April 2012 (UTC)&lt;/span&gt;&lt;!-- Template:Unsigned IP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> == Equating Magenta and Fuchsia ==<br /> <br /> Are the 2 color names '''exactly''' the same?? This article equates them, but there are some sources, such as Crayola Crayons, that do not. Any opinions?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 21:58, 13 Apr 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :My opinion is that they are not the same at all. I think Fuschia is a lighter shade of Magenta. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 17:52, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Specifically, what color (using RGB coordinates)?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 17:54, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Comparing it to the Fuschia hybrid plant and some other fuschia examples, the RGB I get is around (244, 0, 161). You can see it's a little pinker and lighter than Magenta. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 19:50, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::The commercial colour name ''Fuchsia'' is used for a much more saturated colour &amp;mdash; and it's the origin of the common usage.--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:05, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::As far as I've known my entire life, fuschia is basically 255-0-255, while Magenta would be closer to 255-0-128. If you open up [[MSPaint]], the &quot;pink&quot; (right by orange) is magenta, and the &quot;light purple&quot; (by blue) is fuchsia. [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:09, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::Your MSPaint is a ghost link. Does the program have an article?? If so, please create a re-direct. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 01:09, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::::There you go! (If you have Windows, just click on Start, Run, then type in MSPaint). [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:15, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::So, why is it called CMYK rather than CFYK?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 01:19, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::::That's a tough one. I don't know--that's how I learned it though, and [[Crayola]] agrees with me, as far as I can remember. A Google search returns a wide range of colors for both of them. [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:35, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Fuchsia cannot be 255-0-255. That is Magenta. The entire purpose of Magenta is that it was created a Processing color as one of the first aniline dyes. It is a spectral color that is NOT natural, as you have to bend the visible spectrum around to combine red and blue.<br /> <br /> ::::Fuchsia is the color representing the Fuchsia flower. It is clearly a distinct visible color as Fuchsia has much less purple quality to it and more of a richer pink.<br /> <br /> ::::This entire debate could have been avoided if the original web designers stuck to a convention of naming primary web colors as Magenta. Instead, someone, I have no idea who, decided to stick fuchsia in there. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 16:59, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Fuchsia generally is the more &quot;pure [non-yellowish] red&quot; of CYMK printing, and thus corresponds closely to 255-0-128 or at most 255-0-192. Before the era of computers for the general public, &quot;magenta&quot; always seemed to denote a more bluish deep pink, so I would say ''this'' was FF00FF! I always wondered why they used both &quot;magenta&quot; and &quot;fuschsia&quot; for that color. They should change &quot;fuchsia&quot; to FF0080 or FF00C0. Likewise, there is confusion as &quot;cyan&quot; refers to both the greenish 00FFFF of the screen, as well as the approximate 00C0FF of print ink.[[User:Eric B|Eric B]] 19:49, 7 February 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::: Hi folks. While you're battling it out which name stands for what shade today, I think it's important to keep in mind, when and why these names were created, and to also inform the reader what shades they originally stood for. Please cf. below my comment on History... --[[User:BjKa|BjKa]] 07:36, 7 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Magenta and Amaranth==<br /> <br /> The color on the right below referred to as #FF0090 is similar to a color known as amaranth (which is slightly redder) because it is the color of the flower of the [[amaranth]] plant. There is a book called ''The Dictionary of Color'' by Maerz and Paul, published in 1964, in which this color is specifically called &quot;amaranth&quot;. Before personal computers became common, this book was the standard reference on color. This book is still widely available in many libraries. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 11:41, 3 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta in human culture ==<br /> <br /> I removed this section. It appears to have to do with the meanings of the word magenta, not the color. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 13:40, 12 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> : The '''fashion''', '''cosmetology''', '''art''', '''food''' and '''parapsychology''' subsections of '''magenta in human culture''' appear to be related to the colour and not the word. [[User:PaleAqua|PaleAqua]] 02:23, 13 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> Responding to this criticism, I restored the sections mentioned above that have to do only with the color and I added a new section called '''astronomy''' which tells about magenta brown dwarfs. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:47, 14 September 2006 (UTC)↔<br /> It is important to keep the [color] in Human Culture section because all the other major colors have it. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:50, 14 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Shades of...==<br /> See discussion at [[Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Color#Shades_of..._Subsections]]. [[User:PaleAqua|PaleAqua]] 21:04, 18 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Department of redundancy department ==<br /> <br /> &quot;It is a pure chroma on the color wheel between violet and red. Magenta lies on the color wheel between violet and rose, and therefore it is a pure chroma.&quot;<br /> Obviously one of these sentences should be removed. I haven't done so, lest there be strong opinions on which one it should be.<br /> Also, why are there two swatches (with the same HTML colour) next to each other? I've seen this on other colour pages, too. -[[User:Ahruman|Ahruman]] 14:12, 7 December 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The double color looks like a &quot;my template's cooler than yours!&quot; war... they're both gone as of now. And I fixed the sentence. Come on! [[Be bold]]er! ;) [[User:Matt Yeager|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#DF0001&quot;&gt;Matt Yeager&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[Special:Random|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot; color=&quot;#B46611&quot;&gt;♫&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] &lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;([[User_talk:Matt Yeager|&lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;Talk?&lt;/font&gt;]])&lt;/font&gt; 22:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == History of the discovery of the magenta dye ==<br /> <br /> The article links to a Website which says:&lt;br&gt;<br /> ''1859 saw the arrival of François-Emmanuel Verguin's fuchsine and Edward Chambers Nicholson's roseine, known soon after as magenta. [Philip Ball, Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2001), 214.]''<br /> If someone could confirm this, it should go into the article. Me for example, I looked up Magenta because I wanted to know what my laser printer had to do with an Italian town. And I find the historic part of the article a bit underrepresented to say the least. --[[User:BjKa|BjKa]] 07:36, 7 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Shades comparison strip charts==<br /> <br /> The strips of color in the comparison chart, which generally duplicate the colors provided at the bottom via the templates, are found now only in [[magenta]], [[cyan]], and [[indigo]] of all the common color names. I propose we remove it from here, as it's ugly, strange, and duplicative. Any objections or support? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 04:29, 12 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> I strongly object to removing these charts. I created all of them and I think they are beautiful. They are not duplicative--the Color Comparison Chart displays the shades of a particular color in approximate order of their shades (from the lightest at the top to most saturated in the middle to the darkest at the bottom) rather than in alphabetical order as in the Shades Template at the bottom of the article. The purpose of these Color Comparison Charts is to enable the Wikipedia user to more easily pick out a particular color which they may need for a particular use. For example, if someone is going to design a website, repaint a room, paint their house, or purchase a new automobile, they can look at the Color Comparison Charts and choose which color is best for or is closest to the color they need. It is much easier to do this when the colors are arranged in order of their shade instead of being arranged in alphabetical order. In addition, they display colors such as Crayola colors which may not be in the regular color articles and thus allow the user a greater selection of colors to choose from. I am restoring all of them with a short explanation as to their purpose and use. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:42, 14 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : If a user wants to pick a color scheme for a house or similar, they should first use a color space such as L*a*b*, in which colors can be precisely specified. But second and more importantly, they should examine and compare actual paint chips. If they are going to design a website, they can use something like [http://kuler.adobe.com/ Adobe's kuler] or similar. If they're going to purchase an automobile, they should examine cars in the possible colors, as no image on a computer screen is going to be an adequate representation. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a list of arbitrary proprietary color names. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 01:51, 16 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : I'm moving this bit of discussion to [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Color]]. Anyway, what does &quot;order of their shade&quot; mean, exactly? Color is not one-dimensional. It seems to me that they are roughly ordered by lightness, with colorfulness and hue ordered arbitrarily. I'm not sure why this is a particularly logical ordering. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 02:11, 16 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Which magenta?==<br /> <br /> Matt Yeager just changed the magenta in the lead, which was the fuchsia-colored one, to a different magenta. What should we be using here? With what reference source? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 06:25, 10 July 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The best source, imho, is the simplest. [http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&amp;q=magenta&amp;gbv=2 Google] returns (mostly) ff0080-type results. See also [http://www.systeminsight.co.uk/Canon_Printheads_TestPrints.htm this page]. [[User:Matt Yeager|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#DF0001&quot;&gt;Matt Yeager&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[Special:Random|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot; color=&quot;#B46611&quot;&gt;♫&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[User_talk:Matt Yeager|&lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;(Talk?)&lt;/font&gt;]] 06:31, 10 July 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Whatever we choose should be referenced to an authoritative source. A google hit count is not an authoritative source, and most random web pages are also not. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:47, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I think we want to use an &quot;ink-color&quot; type magenta, not a ff00ff-like one. The current infobox hasa decent one. But it would really be good to show some images of magenta objects that show some range. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 21:28, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Fine, but whatever magenta we give color coordinates for needs to have a source. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 22:32, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::The [[Web colors#X11 color list|X11 color list]] gives magenta as FF00FF, not FF0080. This is the color normally considered magenta because it is exactly halfway between red and blue at 300 degrees on the [[HSV color space|hsv color wheel]]. The ink color magenta is already listed in the article as FF0090 from a [[CMYK]] source. There is no harm in listing FF0080 as a variation of magenta (if it can be linked to a source), but FF00FF is the color that is considered magenta by web designers and should be in the color box at the beginning of the article. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:38, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Since X11 is the only cited source, I changed the numbers to be consistent with it. And I generalized the description. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 15:19, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::: No, I don't think that's a good idea. X11 Magenta is completely different from the meaning of &quot;magenta&quot; for centuries before. I think the X11 guys needed a name for FF00FF, and just picked &quot;magenta&quot; as the first thing they could think of. I agree it's good to have a source, but the X11 colors aren't a very good source for this, IMO. We could try converting 100% magenta ink color (maybe like from some SWOP CMYK space) to sRGB using ColorSync or some other CMM, and then source that as the color for &quot;Magenta&quot;. But really this is a reason that I don't like swatches for such articles: &quot;Magenta&quot; doesn't refer to a particular color, so much as a range of colors. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:01, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: The HSV color wheel is nearly useless, because it spaces things out according to a particular RGB color space, and has little to do with human perception. In any case, I don't think there are any magenta pigments close to the lightness and colorfulness of FF00FF magenta, even if the hue isn't *too* far off. In any case, just as &quot;green&quot; isn't 00FF00, magenta shouldn't be FF00FF, based only on what &quot;web designers&quot; say. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:03, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::I'm open to any other sourced definition. But this RGB/HSV one is the only one we've been given so far. Just need to be clear that we're talking about the X11 magenta when we use it. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 18:17, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I put in Matt Yeager's color under &quot;Additional Variations of Magenta&quot; and titled it &quot;Inkjet Magenta&quot;. I measured the color shown on the web site source (which I listed as the source) with my Macintosh Digital Color Meter and the reading was hex code=DD147C and RGB code=221,20,124. I think this is a reasonable compromise. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:50, 8 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::I object to listing your measurements; several of us have complained about this before. It's called [[WP:OR]]. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 15:53, 8 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Just a comment on using Google here. I think Google result counts can be helpful in choosing which usage of two ''sourced'' pieces of information to consider most common, for example what to title this article if ''majenta'' were also a dictionary-referenced alternate spelling. But I agree with Dicklyon that they aren't a reliable source for the actual piece of information. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 18:23, 20 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::My reading of suggestions in [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Color/Principles]] is that color values (as in an infobox) should be used only when there is a reliable standard for those values. X11 certainly is a standard. However, magenta existed before X11, and refers to a broad range of colors, historically different from X11's magenta. Because of that, I think an X11-sourced color infobox should be used only to illustrate X11 magenta,&quot; not magenta in general. I don't think X11 or any other a color infobox is appropriate at the beginning of this article, since there is no single, authoritative source for the color values. Finding photographs of magenta-colored things (flowers, dyed clothes, etc.), the way [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:MeyerLemon.jpg this lemon picture] illustrates green, seems to be the recommended approach. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 17:23, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Replaced null-hypothesis.co.uk as source ==<br /> I replaced the reference for magenta not being a spectral color, as the previous source was not what I'd consider reliable. In case there's any question on this, [http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/about http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/about] says &quot;So is all the content made up? Not at all, it's a complete mixture. Some of the articles are utter drivel but we also highlight real research and real news stories,....&quot; I'm not sure if that's dry British humor or they're serious, but either way it doesn't seem reliable. :-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:01, 20 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Propose removal of &quot;Additional variations of magenta&quot; section ==<br /> While the section contains interesting information, I don't think it offers any sources that would be considered reliable. (See [[WP:RS]] for an explanation of the &quot;reliable sources&quot; policy). Does anyone think any of the citations in this section qualify as reliable? If not, are there any objections to removing the section?<br /> <br /> Some of the information could be retained if a reliable source is there or can be found. I've looked a bit myself, but haven't found anything yet. &quot;T-Mobile magenta&quot; seems to be more commonly called &quot;T-Mobile pink,&quot; whether it's correct or or not, and I didn't find any reliable source that says either is actually a color name.<br /> <br /> There are some references within the article to other Wikipedia articles, like [[X11 colors]] or [[List of Crayola crayon colors]], but I don't think Wikipedia articles should ever be considered reliable sources (in the [[WP:RS]] sense) themselves, even if those articles may cite their own reliable sources. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:49, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I agree; take them all out, and allow them back only when sourced. Sources like &quot;This color was sampled directly from the image of the actual colored pencil in a picture of a set of Venus colored pencils for sale on eBay&quot; don't count. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 06:34, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I was able to find citations for Crayola's Hot Magenta, which I added, as well as some support for Deutsche Telekom/T-Mobile's magenta, which I only added in passing in the Hot Magenta subsection so far. Researching their legal grab of use rights of the color magenta makes me want to crush my T-Mobile phone; I'll try to remember [[WP:NPOV]]. ;-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 10:05, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: But Crayola's hot magenta is really only relevant in the context of the list of crayola colors. I don't think it belongs at this page: there's nothing about it that changed people's opinions or usage of magenta; it's just a random part of an arbitrary list of colors. We could just as well add the exact coordinates of every art supply from every manufacturer named &quot;magenta&quot;. The name &quot;hot magenta&quot; is a marketing name, and I've seen no evidence that it's in wider use beyond crayola. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:40, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::I agree; it's lame to mention every Crayola color in each color article where it might fit. It's undue weight on one manufacturer's list. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:43, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::See [[Colour trademark]] for more on that topic. It's not a t-mobile or magenta issue. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:43, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: I completely agree that exact coordinates shouldn't be supplied for Crayola's Hot Magenta; I'm new to color articles, and left it in assuming that's the way things are done, but after further reading I don't think it's appropriate.<br /> <br /> :::: I agree that Hot Magenta is a Crayola-specific name, but don't think mentioning Crayola's magenta colors is unreasonable or gives Crayola ''undue'' weight over other colored art medium suppliers. In the US, Crayola is very well known brand, and carries a long history, making it more significant than, say, the ''Venus Paradise'' pencils of the 1950s-1960s. Google News archives (admittedly with a recent-news bias) lists 22,500 articles referencing Crayola, including several that mention [http://news.google.com/archivesearch?q=crayola+magenta&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;tab=wn &quot;magenta,&quot;] and [http://news.google.com/archivesearch?q=crayola+hot.magenta&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;tab=wn &quot;hot magenta,&quot;] versus 123 referencing Venus Paradise, none of which mention &quot;sky magenta.&quot; There are competitors to Crayola in the crayon industry like Rose Art Industries, and well-known brands within the art industry like PrismaColor, but I don't think they approach Crayola's significance, and I found no articles mentioning other suppliers that also mentioned their magenta color. Crayola can garner news coverage in the US (albeit trivial news) with a color introduction, the way M&amp;M can with candy colors. I don't think hot magenta is worthy of a subsection as it has now, but I was seeing what could be sourced from the existing &quot;Variations&quot; section, and I don't think mentioning Crayola's magenta and/or Hot Magenta overrepresents their importance compared to other material in this article. I'd welcome some other opinions, whether they're for or against inclusion of this info.<br /> <br /> :::::If there's news about hot magenta worth mentioning, we should do that. But to list every crayola color in the 48 or so articles where they might fit would seem to be undue. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 20:24, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: As to the sentences on the trademark issue, I was trying to supply context on why Crayola's trademark is significant, and hoped to segue or combine that with a discussion of T-Mobile's magenta, but I see your point that it doesn't fit as written, and will remove all but the fact that the trademark was filed. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:12, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> * You all are making all this too complicated. There is no reason to delete such a beautiful color as ''hot magenta''. You should remember the saying ''don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good'' [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 11:52, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Dicklyon, I pointed out that it's mentioned in the news because you said &quot;It's undue weight on one manufacturer's list.&quot; I was showing why more weight over other manufacturers seemed warranted. Personally I think Crayola's changes can reflect cultural significance, even if insignificant themselves. But we've got two votes against, and one to keep it for the dubious reason that it's beautiful (sorry keraunos! ;-). So I'll delete it, and someone can re-add if it seems appropriate as the article evolves. Here's the sentence: <br /> :*[[Crayola]] introduced their trademarked Hot Magenta color in 1972 in a boxed set of eight [[crayon]]s called &quot;Fluorescent 8.&quot;&lt;ref name=&quot;crayola-hotmagenta&quot;&gt;{{cite web |url=http://www.crayola.com/colorcensus/history/history.cfm?id=hot%20magenta|title=&quot;Crayola crayon chronology: Hot magenta|accessdate=2007-09-21|publisher=Crayola LLC}}&lt;/ref&gt;&lt;ref&gt;(Filed [[2007]]-[[02-22]].) [http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&amp;entry=77113883 &quot;Latest status info: Serial number 77113883, mark Hot Magenta.&quot;] ''Trademark Applications and Registrations Retrieval'' (TARR) website, United States Patents and Trademark Office. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-21]].&lt;/ref&gt; -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:04, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Propose removal of &quot;Shades of ...&quot; boxes at end of article ==<br /> <br /> Magenta is in three &quot;Shades&quot; categories: red, pink, and violet. I don't disagree with their inclusion in those categories, and I don't think inclusion in a category is something that requires a reliable source. However, by showing information about the other members in the categories, rather than just including text saying magenta is in those categories, it means the Magenta article is now showing unsourced material, like [[Thistle (color)]] (which has no references) being a shade of violet. There are nearly 100 color names and swatches listed at the end of the article. It takes a large amount of space, and when I first saw it, I thought it was unsourced content in the article itself, lacking introductory text to the section, until I edited the text and saw the category template usage. While the graphical layouts are great to have in the category articles themselves, their inclusion in the magenta article seems confusing and inappropriate. Magenta can still be included in the categories by using &lt;nowiki&gt;[[Category:Shades of red]] instead of {{shades of red}}&lt;/nowiki&gt;, it just wouldn't display all the other colors then. The &quot;shades of &quot; articles could also be listed in a See Also section. Thoughts? -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 16:56, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : The shades of templates are generally arbitrary and unhelpful. I think they should all be removed. In any case, Magenta definitely could not be called &quot;red&quot;, so it should not have that template or be in that category. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:35, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::This is a general issue in color articles, and should be taken up in the color project. I'd support removing them, but if you just do it here someone will put it back &quot;for consistency&quot;. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:44, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::Ok, I asked in the [[Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Color#Opinion_on_removing_the_.22Shades_of.....22_color_charts_from_an_article.3F|the &quot;WikiProject Color&quot; talk page here]]. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 21:24, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Removing the shades of templates is absurd. The Wikipedia user needs them to find their way to the other colors of the same type. You need to think of the convenience of the Wikipedia user. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:36, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I find them a distracting waste of space, and 90% of the articles that they link to are stub pages that will never be more than stubs, and should be merged or deleted. Wikipedia users don't need to find their way to those pages, and would be better served if all the information about a particular color was consolidated in one place instead of spread out over 20 stubs. I don't mean any disrespect, and it's obvious that they took lots of care and effort to create, but I just don't think the strip charts and shades of templates improve the articles they are included in. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 10:28, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: In any case, Dicklyon is right. The place for this discussion is wikiproject color talk. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 10:31, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Coverage of T-Mobile's magenta ==<br /> <br /> I was planning on writing a paragraph about Deutsche Telekom's (a.k.a. T-Mobile's) magenta, along with DT's trademark claim and related legal battles. [[Colour trademark]]s covers the primary topic, but summarizing info about T-mobile's case seems reasonable here. The case is frequently mentioned in recent articles on color trademarks, and T-mobile seems to be the only company that claims a broad (i.e. multi-industry) trademark on the color magenta. Does that seem reasonable for inclusion? Any thoughts on what to include or exclude? -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:18, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Mention &quot;shocking pink?&quot; ==<br /> <br /> &quot;Shocking pink&quot; is currently listed in the Variations section, with unsourced information describing its 1930s fashion origins. There are news articles that call it a magenta, and the basic unsourced information can be sourced. Is it worth doing this, and mentioning it in this article along with a wiki-link to [[Pink#Shocking_pink]]? Reliable sources confirm it's a named color, and describe it the &quot;signature color&quot; of the fashion designer who named and popularized it. Her use of colors apparently heralded a shift in the fashion industry from blacks and navies beginning in the '30s, but other colors were involved in that as well. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:58, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : I think it's perfectly reasonable to discuss this in the article, but it should be incorporated in the meat of the article (see [[Green]] for a good example of how a color articles should be restructured), instead of being in a separate section about a supposed color variation. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 23:41, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Archive of information &quot;variations&quot; section ==<br /> I'm including a reduced copy of the text in the now-deleted variations section, as some of it may prove useful to someone conducting additional research for the article:<br /> <br /> *Pale Magenta (Light Fuchsia Pink), title= Pale Magenta|hex= F984EF|r=249|g=132|b=229| c= 1|m=100|y= 2|k= 0| h=300|s= 27|v= 94<br /> *Light Magenta (Fuchsia Pink), title= Light Magenta|hex= FF77FF|r=255|g=119|b=255| c= 2|m=100|y= 1|k= 0| h=300|s= 47|v= 84<br /> *Ultra Pink, title= Ultra Pink| hex= FF6FFF| r=255|g=111|b=255| c= 3|m=100|y= 1|k= 0| h=300|s= 48|v= 83 This is a [[Crayola]] crayon color formulated in [[1972]]. In [[1990]] the name was changed in error to ''shocking pink''; however, properly speaking, the name ''shocking pink'' should be reserved for only the original [[Pink#Shocking Pink|shocking pink]] invented by [[Elsa Schiaparelli]] in 1936 (shown below).<br /> *Inkjet magenta, title=Inkjet Magenta|hex=DD1470| r=221|g= 20|b=124| c= 0|m= 94|y= 14|k= 0| h=332|s= 96|v= 87<br /> *'''Inkjet magenta''' is a variation of the ''process magenta'' shown above that is used in many [[inkjet printer]]s.<br /> *Shocking pink, title=Shocking Pink|hex=FC0FC0| r=252|g= 15|b=192| c= 0|m= 94|y= 14|k= 0| h=315|s= 94|v= 99 '''Shocking Pink''', (also sometimes called ''neon pink'') is bold and intense. Fashion designer [[Elsa Schiaparelli]] formulated this color in 1936, naming it ''shocking pink''; it was the color of the box her [[perfume]] called ''Shocking Pink'' came in (the box was shaped like the torso of film star [[Mae West]]).<br /> *Deutsche Telekom Magenta (T-Mobile Magenta), title= T-Mobile Magenta| hex= E4238E| r=228|g= 35|b=142| h=313|s= 82|v= 88|source=[http://www.t-mobile.com/ Internet]}} Displayed at right is the color '''[[Deutsche Telekom]] magenta''', otherwise known as '''T-Mobile Magenta'''. This is the color of their new magenta [[cellular phone]], which debuted in February 2007. The source of this color is the following website: [http://www.t-mobile.com/]<br /> *Sky Magenta, title= Sky Magenta| hex= CF71AF| r=207|g=113|b=175| c= 5|m= 98|y= 7|k= 0| h=304|s= 87|v= 54 Displayed at right is the color '''sky magenta'''. This color was one of the colors in the set of ''Venus Paradise'' colored pencils, a popular brand of colored pencils in the 1950s. This color was sampled directly from the image of the actual colored pencil in a picture of a set of Venus colored pencils for sale on [[eBay]]. This color is also called '''medium lavender'''.<br /> *Deep magenta, title= Deep Magenta| hex= CC00CC| r=204|g= 0|b=204| c= 3|m=100|y= 2|k= 0| h=300|s= 67|v= 37 |source=[http://www.webdiner.com/annexe/hexcode/hexcode.htm Hexcode Color Chart]}}<br /> *Dark magenta title= Dark Magenta| hex= 8B008B| r=139|g= 0|b=139| c= 3|m= 85|y= 2|k= 35| h=300|s= 33|v= 25|source=[[Web colors#X11 color list|X11]]}}<br /> <br /> -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:18, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta in human culture: pruning proposal ==<br /> I'm planning on removing any unsourced entries in this section. Speak up if you object, or want a delay.<br /> <br /> As a general suggestion on this section, I think we should exclude cultural references to &quot;magenta&quot; unless the use of the term refers somehow to the color, rather than just the word. For example, the character Magenta in [[Sky High]] can turn into a magenta-colored guinnea pig, while the character Magenta in [[Rocky Horror Picture Show]] may have no connection to the color other than the name. The prog rock band Magenta is another example I'd exclude. Certainly room for exceptions, I'm just suggesting it as a general tip, and don't feel strongly about it. Feedback welcome. :-)<br /> <br /> -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:46, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I regard the &quot;in culture&quot; sections as invitations to collect trivia, like trivia sections, which are officially discouraged. So I would agree that any such items need to be both relevant and sourced; if it's not about the color, it's not relevant to the topic of the article, and should be omitted. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 00:50, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I see your point and tend to agree. I'll prune first, to take it one step at a time, then we can see what's left that's sourced, and how some of it might fit into a different, more prose-like structure. (Not implying all sourced material must be kept). -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:59, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: The main concern I have is items’ relevance to the article. Factoids which are completely irrelevant to describing Magenta should be removed straight away, whether or not they have sources. For example, “Rhubarb is magenta after sugar is added and it is boiled into rhubarb sauce or baked in pies to achieve a flavor similar to sweet and sour sauce” is not at all relevant to the article about the color, instead belonging in the article about rhubarb. Things which are relevant but unsourced should have {{tl|cn}} tags stuck after them for a while. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 02:31, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Yes, that's a good way to do it. It is also up to the editor's discretion to simply remove unsourced items that seem flaky; if someone wants them back, they'll bring them back, hopefully with sources, or a cn tag can be placed when they come back. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 02:37, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == use of dictionaries as sources ==<br /> <br /> The use of dictionaries as sources for this article seem a bit dubious. For example, while 3 dictionaries might call magenta &quot;purplish red&quot;, I don't think that's particularly accurate. The dictionaries are trying for a simple definition which can be easily understood by a lay reader, rather than the kind of technical description an encyclopedia should aim for. We should more accurately say that magenta is a hue somewhere between &quot;purple&quot; and &quot;red&quot;, or better still give the approximate wavelength of a spectral color which would be called magenta (and find a source for that).<br /> <br /> Additionally, citing 6 different dictionary entries (on the two words magenta and fuchsin) in different footnotes seems like a silly attempt to boost the number of sources, rather than any real improvement in statement sourcing. The entries have significant overlap: for instance the websters medical dictionary entry for ''fuchsin'' contains all the information of the other two entries, so citing them also is rather useless, and furthermore this article's interpretation of that entry is suspect: it does not say that fuscin was named after the fuchsia genus, and it's unclear to me that this is implied.<br /> <br /> Also, the claim “The dye magenta may also be called fuchsin, fuchsine or roseine” seems inaccurate to me. As described by [http://dept.kent.edu/museum/exhibit/colors/3.htm], these are original historical names, not current alternates. I'd like to see better sourcing for this claim, including some more recent use than the &quot;Origin: 1860–65&quot; which is the most recent date listed in those dictionary entries for roseine and fuchsin.<br /> <br /> --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 18:55, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : For that matter, the WP article [[Fuchsine]] is more complete than these dictionary definitions anyway. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 19:22, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Also, I would remove the sourcing of Britannica for the statement that magenta is extra-spectral, and replace it with a note to &quot;see [[color vision]]&quot; or similar. This claim is not contentious (it's a widely-known basic fact with no real need for a source), so any note should point the interested reader at a fuller background discussion. Since the Britannica article is unavailable to the public (requires a paid subscription), it doesn't very well serve that purpose. Ideally, a fuller description of extra-spectral colors could happen in this article itself. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 19:08, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I cited a source for the color description because there's no well agreed-upon definition, and three dictionaries agreed on purplish-red. I was thinking perhaps it's more accurate to say it traditionally referred to a deep purplish-red associated with the dye, but now refers to a wider range of colors. However, but I'll change it back to pinkish pink. Rewording the dye sentence could indicate that some uses are archaic, I didn't catch that, but I'll just link to fuchsine as you suggest. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:33, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :: I'd rather not call it &quot;purplish pink&quot; either. I don't think that's any more accurate than &quot;purplish red&quot;. Instead what we should do is say &quot;it's ≈ Lab hue angle such-and-such&quot;, or &quot;it's any color that matches the hue of such-and-such range of wavelengths&quot;, or similar. Don't bother changing it from purplish-red to purplish-pink: &quot;magenta&quot; as usually defined is a hue about halfway between &quot;purple&quot; and &quot;red&quot;. Just I don't think dictionaries are particularly great sources for that information. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 00:43, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :: I also think that there's reasonable consensus about what color &quot;magenta&quot; is. It just doesn't happen to match what gets called &quot;magenta&quot; in computer graphics, which came about by just picking the nearest color name matching the hue that resulted from mixing the kinds of R and B lights in RGB displays. That the hue of this color is somewhat different than the hue previously understood to be &quot;magenta&quot; is unfortunate, but I don't think it changes any agreement about what &quot;magenta&quot; means in general. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 00:51, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I changed it before I read this, but I'll leave further edits to someone else. Indeed, it refers to a pretty broad range. I think the opening paragraph should strive for accessibility for a topic this simple, something a ten-year-old might understand. A range of intervals in nanometers for two wavelengths (or terahertz, angles, etc.) isn't mean much to most people. :-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 01:08, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Transparency use of magenta (magic pink) ==<br /> <br /> Some programs use magenta on their sprites to represent transparency. I'd like to know something 'bout it and maybe add that information to the article. It's written in the portuguese version (translated): &quot;Also is used a lot as transparency regulator.&quot; &lt;small&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/201.3.159.228|201.3.159.228]] ([[User talk:201.3.159.228|talk]]) 14:29, 14 June 2008 (UTC)&lt;/small&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Someone wrote about this in the article [[Magic Pink]]. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] ([[User talk:Keraunos|talk]]) 00:46, 23 August 2008 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :It might be true, but unless someone can produce a source, it shouldn't be so claimed in wikipedia. Certainly it doesn't need a whole article with a different name for the same color. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 01:17, 23 August 2008 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Chemical Compostition ==<br /> <br /> I'm curious to find out the process involved in the fabrication of this colour. Apart for briefly mentioning Process Magenta used in printing, this article focuses far to much, in my opinion on the electronic magenta and its Hex-Dec numbers.<br /> Does no-one care to mention Quinacridone PR122 (the modern chemically produced pigement) or the history of its producion. Which is widely available in modern paints such as Old Holland Magenta.<br /> I would be very interested in this information, and furthermore on anything relating to the traditional pigments that preceeded it. <br /> &lt;ref&gt;tube of paint Old Holland Paint in front of me, D181&lt;/ref&gt;<br /> Thanks<br /> [[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]] ([[User talk:Cageybee|talk]]) 20:18, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]][[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]] ([[User talk:Cageybee|talk]]) 20:18, 29 June 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta as a spectral color ==<br /> <br /> See the discussion at [[User_talk:Dicklyon#Magenta_Color]] and [[User_talk:110.174.23.139#Magenta]]. I plan to stay out of it and let someone else try to talk reason with him. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 04:07, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> :Seems to me that any wavelength of monochromatic light that stimulated the red cones and blue cones equally would also stimulate the green cones. I would not think that that would produce the same perceived color as a mix of red monochromatic light and blue monochromatic light which stimulated only the red and blue cones.[[User:Constant314|Constant314]] ([[User talk:Constant314|talk]]) 21:24, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> ::That's right; any wavelength that stimulates the long and short [[cone cell]]s about equally is called green. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 22:25, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Reason is fine but lets just clarify whats being said, please. The idea that is being promoted is of two distinct colors of light enter the eye and are combineed to produce a color (in this case Magenta).<br /> <br /> However ...<br /> <br /> White light is a wavefront with power(energy) equally distributed across the visible frequency spectrum. When the wavefront has power levels distributed at different frequencies so that some parts the spectrum have more or less power, then we call that a color. The wavefront that impacts the eye to produce the sensation of Magenta has high power levels in the lower and higher frequencies and low power levels in the center frequencies. It is just one wavefront but shaped in power intensity vs frequency. There is no such thing as different colors of light waves, only a wavefront that has a power vs frequency shape. As such there are not incoming different frequencies of light to produce a color, its just one wavefront. No separate blue or red light enters the eye to be combined and produce a color. The color is inherent in the energy distribution of the wavefront which stimulates the frequency sensitive biological receptors in proportion to the power levels within the wavefront.<br /> <br /> It is for this reason that Magenta is (as are all colors) spectral. It is the energy vs frequency distribution of the incoming wavefront that produces the perceived color sensation. Any color you like can be produced by a single tunable light source through modulation.<br /> <br /> One wavefront .... not seperate incoming light colors.<br /> [[Special:Contributions/110.174.23.139|110.174.23.139]] ([[User talk:110.174.23.139|talk]]) 03:57, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::You can also combine red light from one source and blue from another and get the sensation on magenta. Thats how a color monitor creates magenta. [[User:Constant314|Constant314]] ([[User talk:Constant314|talk]]) 05:02, 18 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Copied from my reply on my talk page:<br /> <br /> :I'm not sure what you mean by &quot;wavefront&quot; here, but I agree that in general the light coming in can be described as having a spectrum and that different spectral shapes appear as different colors. That's all good. But &quot;spectral color&quot; has a meaning: it means a color that can be separated out of the spectrum as a single narrow frequency or wavelength range. Spectral colors are the colors on the curved outer edge of the CIE xy chromaticity diagram, or other chromaticity diagram (uv, or whatever). These are the colors you get by putting white light through a prism. That's what spectral color means, and magenta is not among those. Right? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon#top|talk]]) 06:04, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :And a bit more:<br /> <br /> :When we describe magenta as a combination of red and blue light, that's probably slightly sloppy wording. It's not that the different light wave frequencies inherent have red and blue colors, but that if we viewed those wavelengths alone they would appear as red and blue. But it's also not true that one color, magenta, enters the eye. What enters the eye is a spectrum of light, as you note. If the spectrum looks like the spectrum of a red color plus the spectrum of a blue color, it will ellicit the percept of magenta. I think we are all in agreement on that. Just need to come to share an understanding of the definition of &quot;spectral color&quot;; it's not just any color ellicited by a spectrum; on the contrary, it's only those colors that one gets via spectral analysis, or separation of the wavelengths, as by a prism or a diffraction grating. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 06:21, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Variations of magenta ==<br /> <br /> There's obviously no reason why both [[Magenta]] and [[Variations of magenta]] should contain near-identical information about the three &quot;main&quot; versions. It should be removed from one of them, so it's clear what each article covers. The most logical solution, to me, appears to be that the information about those three versions should be removed from the Variations article, and the main Magenta article can say, &quot;For information about additional variations, see [[Variations of magenta]].&quot; Or, the information about those three versions could be removed from the main Magenta article, which could say, &quot;For information about variations of Magenta, see [[Variations of magenta]].&quot;<br /> <br /> In any case, the link to [[Variations of magenta]] should be more prominent than it is now, and I'm about to cram it in somewhere, but I have no idea how to do it logically because &quot;If you want to read pretty much the same information from this article, plus some other stuff, click here&quot; doesn't have a very nice ring to it. [[User:Theoldsparkle|Theoldsparkle]] ([[User talk:Theoldsparkle|talk]]) 20:59, 26 April 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Alternatively we could merge the articles? [[User:Carlaxs|Carlaxs]] ([[User talk:Carlaxs|talk]]) 22:24, 16 June 2011 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Magenta&diff=486564647 Talk:Magenta 2012-04-10T04:53:48Z <p>76.16.18.252: </p> <hr /> <div>{{WikiProject Color|class=start|importance=high}}<br /> == Magenta wraps between... ==<br /> <br /> It says in this article that magenta wraps between red and blue in the color wheel. However, the colors at the edges of the spectrum are red and violet. Any clarifications?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 00:47, 28 Mar 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The spectrum shown in the article is incorrect, as it shows a ''real'' violet &amp;mdash; but violet is extraspectral too! This is probably both an overcorrection of the imperfect blue used by standard monitors and a reflection of the mistake to equate the spectrum with the colours of the rainbow, which is an extreme simplification--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:05, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> ::Show that the colors of the spectrum are '''not the same''' as the colors of the rainbow. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 13:36, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> :::Simply look at a rainbow and it will show you :o).--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 12:09, 11 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> In my defintion, violet is spectral, with a wavelength of about 400nm, see also [http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov/EDDOCS/Wavelengths_for_Colors.html]. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 07:06, 2005 Jun 21 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :If we define it as such; it's correct &amp;mdash; by definition :o). But others define the same hue as &quot;blue&quot;, the blue referred to in &quot;wraps between blue and red&quot;. One cause of confusion. And the hue in the spectrum illustrated in the article is not the 400 nm one. Can't you feel the red vibes? ;o)--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 09:15, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> No, I'm red-green blind. --[[User:Pjacobi|Pjacobi]] 09:58, 2005 Jun 21 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ~:o)--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:40, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : Most definitions, including that given by Hunt's 2004 book ''The Reproduction of Color'', ([http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/color1.html#huenames as cited here]) consider “violet” to include both the edge of the visible spectrum, and some extra-spectral colors. Hunt calls the range between 400nm and the complement of 565nm &quot;bluish purple&quot; or &quot;violet&quot;. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 20:27, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> My question is based on the idea that the &quot;color&quot; of light is based on its frequency (and with a constant velocity also its wavelength) and that when you add two colors of light you should get a new color that is a interference pattern of the two waves. Now this idea follows when you combine red and green light and the mixture of the low frequency red and the medium frequency green combine to produce a yellow that is inbetween the low and high frequency. The same is true for mixing a high frequency blue and medium frequency resulting in a cyan. Why then does mixing a high frequency and a low frequency result in magenta and not a medium frequency green. Is this because magenta is not a true tone?<br /> <br /> == Equating Magenta and Fuchsia ==<br /> <br /> Are the 2 color names '''exactly''' the same?? This article equates them, but there are some sources, such as Crayola Crayons, that do not. Any opinions?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 21:58, 13 Apr 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :My opinion is that they are not the same at all. I think Fuschia is a lighter shade of Magenta. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 17:52, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Specifically, what color (using RGB coordinates)?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 17:54, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Comparing it to the Fuschia hybrid plant and some other fuschia examples, the RGB I get is around (244, 0, 161). You can see it's a little pinker and lighter than Magenta. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 19:50, 14 May 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::The commercial colour name ''Fuchsia'' is used for a much more saturated colour &amp;mdash; and it's the origin of the common usage.--[[User:MWAK|MWAK]] 05:05, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::As far as I've known my entire life, fuschia is basically 255-0-255, while Magenta would be closer to 255-0-128. If you open up [[MSPaint]], the &quot;pink&quot; (right by orange) is magenta, and the &quot;light purple&quot; (by blue) is fuchsia. [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:09, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::Your MSPaint is a ghost link. Does the program have an article?? If so, please create a re-direct. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 01:09, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::::There you go! (If you have Windows, just click on Start, Run, then type in MSPaint). [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:15, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::So, why is it called CMYK rather than CFYK?? [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 01:19, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::::That's a tough one. I don't know--that's how I learned it though, and [[Crayola]] agrees with me, as far as I can remember. A Google search returns a wide range of colors for both of them. [[User:Matt Yeager|Matt Yeager]] 01:35, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Fuchsia cannot be 255-0-255. That is Magenta. The entire purpose of Magenta is that it was created a Processing color as one of the first aniline dyes. It is a spectral color that is NOT natural, as you have to bend the visible spectrum around to combine red and blue.<br /> <br /> ::::Fuchsia is the color representing the Fuchsia flower. It is clearly a distinct visible color as Fuchsia has much less purple quality to it and more of a richer pink.<br /> <br /> ::::This entire debate could have been avoided if the original web designers stuck to a convention of naming primary web colors as Magenta. Instead, someone, I have no idea who, decided to stick fuchsia in there. --[[User:WillDarlock|WillDarlock]] 16:59, 9 December 2005 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Fuchsia generally is the more &quot;pure [non-yellowish] red&quot; of CYMK printing, and thus corresponds closely to 255-0-128 or at most 255-0-192. Before the era of computers for the general public, &quot;magenta&quot; always seemed to denote a more bluish deep pink, so I would say ''this'' was FF00FF! I always wondered why they used both &quot;magenta&quot; and &quot;fuschsia&quot; for that color. They should change &quot;fuchsia&quot; to FF0080 or FF00C0. Likewise, there is confusion as &quot;cyan&quot; refers to both the greenish 00FFFF of the screen, as well as the approximate 00C0FF of print ink.[[User:Eric B|Eric B]] 19:49, 7 February 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::: Hi folks. While you're battling it out which name stands for what shade today, I think it's important to keep in mind, when and why these names were created, and to also inform the reader what shades they originally stood for. Please cf. below my comment on History... --[[User:BjKa|BjKa]] 07:36, 7 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Magenta and Amaranth==<br /> <br /> The color on the right below referred to as #FF0090 is similar to a color known as amaranth (which is slightly redder) because it is the color of the flower of the [[amaranth]] plant. There is a book called ''The Dictionary of Color'' by Maerz and Paul, published in 1964, in which this color is specifically called &quot;amaranth&quot;. Before personal computers became common, this book was the standard reference on color. This book is still widely available in many libraries. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 11:41, 3 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta in human culture ==<br /> <br /> I removed this section. It appears to have to do with the meanings of the word magenta, not the color. [[User:Georgia guy|Georgia guy]] 13:40, 12 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> : The '''fashion''', '''cosmetology''', '''art''', '''food''' and '''parapsychology''' subsections of '''magenta in human culture''' appear to be related to the colour and not the word. [[User:PaleAqua|PaleAqua]] 02:23, 13 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> Responding to this criticism, I restored the sections mentioned above that have to do only with the color and I added a new section called '''astronomy''' which tells about magenta brown dwarfs. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:47, 14 September 2006 (UTC)↔<br /> It is important to keep the [color] in Human Culture section because all the other major colors have it. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:50, 14 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Shades of...==<br /> See discussion at [[Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Color#Shades_of..._Subsections]]. [[User:PaleAqua|PaleAqua]] 21:04, 18 September 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Department of redundancy department ==<br /> <br /> &quot;It is a pure chroma on the color wheel between violet and red. Magenta lies on the color wheel between violet and rose, and therefore it is a pure chroma.&quot;<br /> Obviously one of these sentences should be removed. I haven't done so, lest there be strong opinions on which one it should be.<br /> Also, why are there two swatches (with the same HTML colour) next to each other? I've seen this on other colour pages, too. -[[User:Ahruman|Ahruman]] 14:12, 7 December 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The double color looks like a &quot;my template's cooler than yours!&quot; war... they're both gone as of now. And I fixed the sentence. Come on! [[Be bold]]er! ;) [[User:Matt Yeager|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#DF0001&quot;&gt;Matt Yeager&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[Special:Random|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot; color=&quot;#B46611&quot;&gt;♫&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] &lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;([[User_talk:Matt Yeager|&lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;Talk?&lt;/font&gt;]])&lt;/font&gt; 22:59, 7 December 2006 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == History of the discovery of the magenta dye ==<br /> <br /> The article links to a Website which says:&lt;br&gt;<br /> ''1859 saw the arrival of François-Emmanuel Verguin's fuchsine and Edward Chambers Nicholson's roseine, known soon after as magenta. [Philip Ball, Bright Earth: Art and the Invention of Color (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 2001), 214.]''<br /> If someone could confirm this, it should go into the article. Me for example, I looked up Magenta because I wanted to know what my laser printer had to do with an Italian town. And I find the historic part of the article a bit underrepresented to say the least. --[[User:BjKa|BjKa]] 07:36, 7 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Shades comparison strip charts==<br /> <br /> The strips of color in the comparison chart, which generally duplicate the colors provided at the bottom via the templates, are found now only in [[magenta]], [[cyan]], and [[indigo]] of all the common color names. I propose we remove it from here, as it's ugly, strange, and duplicative. Any objections or support? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 04:29, 12 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> I strongly object to removing these charts. I created all of them and I think they are beautiful. They are not duplicative--the Color Comparison Chart displays the shades of a particular color in approximate order of their shades (from the lightest at the top to most saturated in the middle to the darkest at the bottom) rather than in alphabetical order as in the Shades Template at the bottom of the article. The purpose of these Color Comparison Charts is to enable the Wikipedia user to more easily pick out a particular color which they may need for a particular use. For example, if someone is going to design a website, repaint a room, paint their house, or purchase a new automobile, they can look at the Color Comparison Charts and choose which color is best for or is closest to the color they need. It is much easier to do this when the colors are arranged in order of their shade instead of being arranged in alphabetical order. In addition, they display colors such as Crayola colors which may not be in the regular color articles and thus allow the user a greater selection of colors to choose from. I am restoring all of them with a short explanation as to their purpose and use. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:42, 14 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : If a user wants to pick a color scheme for a house or similar, they should first use a color space such as L*a*b*, in which colors can be precisely specified. But second and more importantly, they should examine and compare actual paint chips. If they are going to design a website, they can use something like [http://kuler.adobe.com/ Adobe's kuler] or similar. If they're going to purchase an automobile, they should examine cars in the possible colors, as no image on a computer screen is going to be an adequate representation. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, not a list of arbitrary proprietary color names. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 01:51, 16 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : I'm moving this bit of discussion to [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Color]]. Anyway, what does &quot;order of their shade&quot; mean, exactly? Color is not one-dimensional. It seems to me that they are roughly ordered by lightness, with colorfulness and hue ordered arbitrarily. I'm not sure why this is a particularly logical ordering. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 02:11, 16 May 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ==Which magenta?==<br /> <br /> Matt Yeager just changed the magenta in the lead, which was the fuchsia-colored one, to a different magenta. What should we be using here? With what reference source? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 06:25, 10 July 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :The best source, imho, is the simplest. [http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&amp;q=magenta&amp;gbv=2 Google] returns (mostly) ff0080-type results. See also [http://www.systeminsight.co.uk/Canon_Printheads_TestPrints.htm this page]. [[User:Matt Yeager|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font color=&quot;#DF0001&quot;&gt;Matt Yeager&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[Special:Random|&lt;b&gt;&lt;font size=&quot;3&quot; color=&quot;#B46611&quot;&gt;♫&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/b&gt;]] [[User_talk:Matt Yeager|&lt;font color=&quot;#00AA88&quot;&gt;(Talk?)&lt;/font&gt;]] 06:31, 10 July 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Whatever we choose should be referenced to an authoritative source. A google hit count is not an authoritative source, and most random web pages are also not. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:47, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I think we want to use an &quot;ink-color&quot; type magenta, not a ff00ff-like one. The current infobox hasa decent one. But it would really be good to show some images of magenta objects that show some range. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 21:28, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Fine, but whatever magenta we give color coordinates for needs to have a source. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 22:32, 4 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::The [[Web colors#X11 color list|X11 color list]] gives magenta as FF00FF, not FF0080. This is the color normally considered magenta because it is exactly halfway between red and blue at 300 degrees on the [[HSV color space|hsv color wheel]]. The ink color magenta is already listed in the article as FF0090 from a [[CMYK]] source. There is no harm in listing FF0080 as a variation of magenta (if it can be linked to a source), but FF00FF is the color that is considered magenta by web designers and should be in the color box at the beginning of the article. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 08:38, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Since X11 is the only cited source, I changed the numbers to be consistent with it. And I generalized the description. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 15:19, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::: No, I don't think that's a good idea. X11 Magenta is completely different from the meaning of &quot;magenta&quot; for centuries before. I think the X11 guys needed a name for FF00FF, and just picked &quot;magenta&quot; as the first thing they could think of. I agree it's good to have a source, but the X11 colors aren't a very good source for this, IMO. We could try converting 100% magenta ink color (maybe like from some SWOP CMYK space) to sRGB using ColorSync or some other CMM, and then source that as the color for &quot;Magenta&quot;. But really this is a reason that I don't like swatches for such articles: &quot;Magenta&quot; doesn't refer to a particular color, so much as a range of colors. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:01, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: The HSV color wheel is nearly useless, because it spaces things out according to a particular RGB color space, and has little to do with human perception. In any case, I don't think there are any magenta pigments close to the lightness and colorfulness of FF00FF magenta, even if the hue isn't *too* far off. In any case, just as &quot;green&quot; isn't 00FF00, magenta shouldn't be FF00FF, based only on what &quot;web designers&quot; say. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:03, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::I'm open to any other sourced definition. But this RGB/HSV one is the only one we've been given so far. Just need to be clear that we're talking about the X11 magenta when we use it. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 18:17, 6 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I put in Matt Yeager's color under &quot;Additional Variations of Magenta&quot; and titled it &quot;Inkjet Magenta&quot;. I measured the color shown on the web site source (which I listed as the source) with my Macintosh Digital Color Meter and the reading was hex code=DD147C and RGB code=221,20,124. I think this is a reasonable compromise. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:50, 8 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::I object to listing your measurements; several of us have complained about this before. It's called [[WP:OR]]. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 15:53, 8 August 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Just a comment on using Google here. I think Google result counts can be helpful in choosing which usage of two ''sourced'' pieces of information to consider most common, for example what to title this article if ''majenta'' were also a dictionary-referenced alternate spelling. But I agree with Dicklyon that they aren't a reliable source for the actual piece of information. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 18:23, 20 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::::My reading of suggestions in [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Color/Principles]] is that color values (as in an infobox) should be used only when there is a reliable standard for those values. X11 certainly is a standard. However, magenta existed before X11, and refers to a broad range of colors, historically different from X11's magenta. Because of that, I think an X11-sourced color infobox should be used only to illustrate X11 magenta,&quot; not magenta in general. I don't think X11 or any other a color infobox is appropriate at the beginning of this article, since there is no single, authoritative source for the color values. Finding photographs of magenta-colored things (flowers, dyed clothes, etc.), the way [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:MeyerLemon.jpg this lemon picture] illustrates green, seems to be the recommended approach. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 17:23, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Replaced null-hypothesis.co.uk as source ==<br /> I replaced the reference for magenta not being a spectral color, as the previous source was not what I'd consider reliable. In case there's any question on this, [http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/about http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/about] says &quot;So is all the content made up? Not at all, it's a complete mixture. Some of the articles are utter drivel but we also highlight real research and real news stories,....&quot; I'm not sure if that's dry British humor or they're serious, but either way it doesn't seem reliable. :-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:01, 20 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Propose removal of &quot;Additional variations of magenta&quot; section ==<br /> While the section contains interesting information, I don't think it offers any sources that would be considered reliable. (See [[WP:RS]] for an explanation of the &quot;reliable sources&quot; policy). Does anyone think any of the citations in this section qualify as reliable? If not, are there any objections to removing the section?<br /> <br /> Some of the information could be retained if a reliable source is there or can be found. I've looked a bit myself, but haven't found anything yet. &quot;T-Mobile magenta&quot; seems to be more commonly called &quot;T-Mobile pink,&quot; whether it's correct or or not, and I didn't find any reliable source that says either is actually a color name.<br /> <br /> There are some references within the article to other Wikipedia articles, like [[X11 colors]] or [[List of Crayola crayon colors]], but I don't think Wikipedia articles should ever be considered reliable sources (in the [[WP:RS]] sense) themselves, even if those articles may cite their own reliable sources. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:49, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I agree; take them all out, and allow them back only when sourced. Sources like &quot;This color was sampled directly from the image of the actual colored pencil in a picture of a set of Venus colored pencils for sale on eBay&quot; don't count. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 06:34, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I was able to find citations for Crayola's Hot Magenta, which I added, as well as some support for Deutsche Telekom/T-Mobile's magenta, which I only added in passing in the Hot Magenta subsection so far. Researching their legal grab of use rights of the color magenta makes me want to crush my T-Mobile phone; I'll try to remember [[WP:NPOV]]. ;-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 10:05, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: But Crayola's hot magenta is really only relevant in the context of the list of crayola colors. I don't think it belongs at this page: there's nothing about it that changed people's opinions or usage of magenta; it's just a random part of an arbitrary list of colors. We could just as well add the exact coordinates of every art supply from every manufacturer named &quot;magenta&quot;. The name &quot;hot magenta&quot; is a marketing name, and I've seen no evidence that it's in wider use beyond crayola. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:40, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::I agree; it's lame to mention every Crayola color in each color article where it might fit. It's undue weight on one manufacturer's list. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:43, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::See [[Colour trademark]] for more on that topic. It's not a t-mobile or magenta issue. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:43, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: I completely agree that exact coordinates shouldn't be supplied for Crayola's Hot Magenta; I'm new to color articles, and left it in assuming that's the way things are done, but after further reading I don't think it's appropriate.<br /> <br /> :::: I agree that Hot Magenta is a Crayola-specific name, but don't think mentioning Crayola's magenta colors is unreasonable or gives Crayola ''undue'' weight over other colored art medium suppliers. In the US, Crayola is very well known brand, and carries a long history, making it more significant than, say, the ''Venus Paradise'' pencils of the 1950s-1960s. Google News archives (admittedly with a recent-news bias) lists 22,500 articles referencing Crayola, including several that mention [http://news.google.com/archivesearch?q=crayola+magenta&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;tab=wn &quot;magenta,&quot;] and [http://news.google.com/archivesearch?q=crayola+hot.magenta&amp;um=1&amp;ie=UTF-8&amp;tab=wn &quot;hot magenta,&quot;] versus 123 referencing Venus Paradise, none of which mention &quot;sky magenta.&quot; There are competitors to Crayola in the crayon industry like Rose Art Industries, and well-known brands within the art industry like PrismaColor, but I don't think they approach Crayola's significance, and I found no articles mentioning other suppliers that also mentioned their magenta color. Crayola can garner news coverage in the US (albeit trivial news) with a color introduction, the way M&amp;M can with candy colors. I don't think hot magenta is worthy of a subsection as it has now, but I was seeing what could be sourced from the existing &quot;Variations&quot; section, and I don't think mentioning Crayola's magenta and/or Hot Magenta overrepresents their importance compared to other material in this article. I'd welcome some other opinions, whether they're for or against inclusion of this info.<br /> <br /> :::::If there's news about hot magenta worth mentioning, we should do that. But to list every crayola color in the 48 or so articles where they might fit would seem to be undue. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 20:24, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::: As to the sentences on the trademark issue, I was trying to supply context on why Crayola's trademark is significant, and hoped to segue or combine that with a discussion of T-Mobile's magenta, but I see your point that it doesn't fit as written, and will remove all but the fact that the trademark was filed. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:12, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> * You all are making all this too complicated. There is no reason to delete such a beautiful color as ''hot magenta''. You should remember the saying ''don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good'' [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 11:52, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Dicklyon, I pointed out that it's mentioned in the news because you said &quot;It's undue weight on one manufacturer's list.&quot; I was showing why more weight over other manufacturers seemed warranted. Personally I think Crayola's changes can reflect cultural significance, even if insignificant themselves. But we've got two votes against, and one to keep it for the dubious reason that it's beautiful (sorry keraunos! ;-). So I'll delete it, and someone can re-add if it seems appropriate as the article evolves. Here's the sentence: <br /> :*[[Crayola]] introduced their trademarked Hot Magenta color in 1972 in a boxed set of eight [[crayon]]s called &quot;Fluorescent 8.&quot;&lt;ref name=&quot;crayola-hotmagenta&quot;&gt;{{cite web |url=http://www.crayola.com/colorcensus/history/history.cfm?id=hot%20magenta|title=&quot;Crayola crayon chronology: Hot magenta|accessdate=2007-09-21|publisher=Crayola LLC}}&lt;/ref&gt;&lt;ref&gt;(Filed [[2007]]-[[02-22]].) [http://tarr.uspto.gov/servlet/tarr?regser=serial&amp;entry=77113883 &quot;Latest status info: Serial number 77113883, mark Hot Magenta.&quot;] ''Trademark Applications and Registrations Retrieval'' (TARR) website, United States Patents and Trademark Office. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-21]].&lt;/ref&gt; -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:04, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Propose removal of &quot;Shades of ...&quot; boxes at end of article ==<br /> <br /> Magenta is in three &quot;Shades&quot; categories: red, pink, and violet. I don't disagree with their inclusion in those categories, and I don't think inclusion in a category is something that requires a reliable source. However, by showing information about the other members in the categories, rather than just including text saying magenta is in those categories, it means the Magenta article is now showing unsourced material, like [[Thistle (color)]] (which has no references) being a shade of violet. There are nearly 100 color names and swatches listed at the end of the article. It takes a large amount of space, and when I first saw it, I thought it was unsourced content in the article itself, lacking introductory text to the section, until I edited the text and saw the category template usage. While the graphical layouts are great to have in the category articles themselves, their inclusion in the magenta article seems confusing and inappropriate. Magenta can still be included in the categories by using &lt;nowiki&gt;[[Category:Shades of red]] instead of {{shades of red}}&lt;/nowiki&gt;, it just wouldn't display all the other colors then. The &quot;shades of &quot; articles could also be listed in a See Also section. Thoughts? -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 16:56, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : The shades of templates are generally arbitrary and unhelpful. I think they should all be removed. In any case, Magenta definitely could not be called &quot;red&quot;, so it should not have that template or be in that category. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 17:35, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::This is a general issue in color articles, and should be taken up in the color project. I'd support removing them, but if you just do it here someone will put it back &quot;for consistency&quot;. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 17:44, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :::Ok, I asked in the [[Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Color#Opinion_on_removing_the_.22Shades_of.....22_color_charts_from_an_article.3F|the &quot;WikiProject Color&quot; talk page here]]. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 21:24, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::Removing the shades of templates is absurd. The Wikipedia user needs them to find their way to the other colors of the same type. You need to think of the convenience of the Wikipedia user. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] 07:36, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I find them a distracting waste of space, and 90% of the articles that they link to are stub pages that will never be more than stubs, and should be merged or deleted. Wikipedia users don't need to find their way to those pages, and would be better served if all the information about a particular color was consolidated in one place instead of spread out over 20 stubs. I don't mean any disrespect, and it's obvious that they took lots of care and effort to create, but I just don't think the strip charts and shades of templates improve the articles they are included in. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 10:28, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: In any case, Dicklyon is right. The place for this discussion is wikiproject color talk. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 10:31, 22 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Coverage of T-Mobile's magenta ==<br /> <br /> I was planning on writing a paragraph about Deutsche Telekom's (a.k.a. T-Mobile's) magenta, along with DT's trademark claim and related legal battles. [[Colour trademark]]s covers the primary topic, but summarizing info about T-mobile's case seems reasonable here. The case is frequently mentioned in recent articles on color trademarks, and T-mobile seems to be the only company that claims a broad (i.e. multi-industry) trademark on the color magenta. Does that seem reasonable for inclusion? Any thoughts on what to include or exclude? -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:18, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Mention &quot;shocking pink?&quot; ==<br /> <br /> &quot;Shocking pink&quot; is currently listed in the Variations section, with unsourced information describing its 1930s fashion origins. There are news articles that call it a magenta, and the basic unsourced information can be sourced. Is it worth doing this, and mentioning it in this article along with a wiki-link to [[Pink#Shocking_pink]]? Reliable sources confirm it's a named color, and describe it the &quot;signature color&quot; of the fashion designer who named and popularized it. Her use of colors apparently heralded a shift in the fashion industry from blacks and navies beginning in the '30s, but other colors were involved in that as well. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 20:58, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : I think it's perfectly reasonable to discuss this in the article, but it should be incorporated in the meat of the article (see [[Green]] for a good example of how a color articles should be restructured), instead of being in a separate section about a supposed color variation. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 23:41, 21 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Archive of information &quot;variations&quot; section ==<br /> I'm including a reduced copy of the text in the now-deleted variations section, as some of it may prove useful to someone conducting additional research for the article:<br /> <br /> *Pale Magenta (Light Fuchsia Pink), title= Pale Magenta|hex= F984EF|r=249|g=132|b=229| c= 1|m=100|y= 2|k= 0| h=300|s= 27|v= 94<br /> *Light Magenta (Fuchsia Pink), title= Light Magenta|hex= FF77FF|r=255|g=119|b=255| c= 2|m=100|y= 1|k= 0| h=300|s= 47|v= 84<br /> *Ultra Pink, title= Ultra Pink| hex= FF6FFF| r=255|g=111|b=255| c= 3|m=100|y= 1|k= 0| h=300|s= 48|v= 83 This is a [[Crayola]] crayon color formulated in [[1972]]. In [[1990]] the name was changed in error to ''shocking pink''; however, properly speaking, the name ''shocking pink'' should be reserved for only the original [[Pink#Shocking Pink|shocking pink]] invented by [[Elsa Schiaparelli]] in 1936 (shown below).<br /> *Inkjet magenta, title=Inkjet Magenta|hex=DD1470| r=221|g= 20|b=124| c= 0|m= 94|y= 14|k= 0| h=332|s= 96|v= 87<br /> *'''Inkjet magenta''' is a variation of the ''process magenta'' shown above that is used in many [[inkjet printer]]s.<br /> *Shocking pink, title=Shocking Pink|hex=FC0FC0| r=252|g= 15|b=192| c= 0|m= 94|y= 14|k= 0| h=315|s= 94|v= 99 '''Shocking Pink''', (also sometimes called ''neon pink'') is bold and intense. Fashion designer [[Elsa Schiaparelli]] formulated this color in 1936, naming it ''shocking pink''; it was the color of the box her [[perfume]] called ''Shocking Pink'' came in (the box was shaped like the torso of film star [[Mae West]]).<br /> *Deutsche Telekom Magenta (T-Mobile Magenta), title= T-Mobile Magenta| hex= E4238E| r=228|g= 35|b=142| h=313|s= 82|v= 88|source=[http://www.t-mobile.com/ Internet]}} Displayed at right is the color '''[[Deutsche Telekom]] magenta''', otherwise known as '''T-Mobile Magenta'''. This is the color of their new magenta [[cellular phone]], which debuted in February 2007. The source of this color is the following website: [http://www.t-mobile.com/]<br /> *Sky Magenta, title= Sky Magenta| hex= CF71AF| r=207|g=113|b=175| c= 5|m= 98|y= 7|k= 0| h=304|s= 87|v= 54 Displayed at right is the color '''sky magenta'''. This color was one of the colors in the set of ''Venus Paradise'' colored pencils, a popular brand of colored pencils in the 1950s. This color was sampled directly from the image of the actual colored pencil in a picture of a set of Venus colored pencils for sale on [[eBay]]. This color is also called '''medium lavender'''.<br /> *Deep magenta, title= Deep Magenta| hex= CC00CC| r=204|g= 0|b=204| c= 3|m=100|y= 2|k= 0| h=300|s= 67|v= 37 |source=[http://www.webdiner.com/annexe/hexcode/hexcode.htm Hexcode Color Chart]}}<br /> *Dark magenta title= Dark Magenta| hex= 8B008B| r=139|g= 0|b=139| c= 3|m= 85|y= 2|k= 35| h=300|s= 33|v= 25|source=[[Web colors#X11 color list|X11]]}}<br /> <br /> -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:18, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta in human culture: pruning proposal ==<br /> I'm planning on removing any unsourced entries in this section. Speak up if you object, or want a delay.<br /> <br /> As a general suggestion on this section, I think we should exclude cultural references to &quot;magenta&quot; unless the use of the term refers somehow to the color, rather than just the word. For example, the character Magenta in [[Sky High]] can turn into a magenta-colored guinnea pig, while the character Magenta in [[Rocky Horror Picture Show]] may have no connection to the color other than the name. The prog rock band Magenta is another example I'd exclude. Certainly room for exceptions, I'm just suggesting it as a general tip, and don't feel strongly about it. Feedback welcome. :-)<br /> <br /> -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:46, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I regard the &quot;in culture&quot; sections as invitations to collect trivia, like trivia sections, which are officially discouraged. So I would agree that any such items need to be both relevant and sourced; if it's not about the color, it's not relevant to the topic of the article, and should be omitted. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 00:50, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::I see your point and tend to agree. I'll prune first, to take it one step at a time, then we can see what's left that's sourced, and how some of it might fit into a different, more prose-like structure. (Not implying all sourced material must be kept). -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:59, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: The main concern I have is items’ relevance to the article. Factoids which are completely irrelevant to describing Magenta should be removed straight away, whether or not they have sources. For example, “Rhubarb is magenta after sugar is added and it is boiled into rhubarb sauce or baked in pies to achieve a flavor similar to sweet and sour sauce” is not at all relevant to the article about the color, instead belonging in the article about rhubarb. Things which are relevant but unsourced should have {{tl|cn}} tags stuck after them for a while. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 02:31, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::::Yes, that's a good way to do it. It is also up to the editor's discretion to simply remove unsourced items that seem flaky; if someone wants them back, they'll bring them back, hopefully with sources, or a cn tag can be placed when they come back. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] 02:37, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == use of dictionaries as sources ==<br /> <br /> The use of dictionaries as sources for this article seem a bit dubious. For example, while 3 dictionaries might call magenta &quot;purplish red&quot;, I don't think that's particularly accurate. The dictionaries are trying for a simple definition which can be easily understood by a lay reader, rather than the kind of technical description an encyclopedia should aim for. We should more accurately say that magenta is a hue somewhere between &quot;purple&quot; and &quot;red&quot;, or better still give the approximate wavelength of a spectral color which would be called magenta (and find a source for that).<br /> <br /> Additionally, citing 6 different dictionary entries (on the two words magenta and fuchsin) in different footnotes seems like a silly attempt to boost the number of sources, rather than any real improvement in statement sourcing. The entries have significant overlap: for instance the websters medical dictionary entry for ''fuchsin'' contains all the information of the other two entries, so citing them also is rather useless, and furthermore this article's interpretation of that entry is suspect: it does not say that fuscin was named after the fuchsia genus, and it's unclear to me that this is implied.<br /> <br /> Also, the claim “The dye magenta may also be called fuchsin, fuchsine or roseine” seems inaccurate to me. As described by [http://dept.kent.edu/museum/exhibit/colors/3.htm], these are original historical names, not current alternates. I'd like to see better sourcing for this claim, including some more recent use than the &quot;Origin: 1860–65&quot; which is the most recent date listed in those dictionary entries for roseine and fuchsin.<br /> <br /> --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 18:55, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> : For that matter, the WP article [[Fuchsine]] is more complete than these dictionary definitions anyway. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 19:22, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Also, I would remove the sourcing of Britannica for the statement that magenta is extra-spectral, and replace it with a note to &quot;see [[color vision]]&quot; or similar. This claim is not contentious (it's a widely-known basic fact with no real need for a source), so any note should point the interested reader at a fuller background discussion. Since the Britannica article is unavailable to the public (requires a paid subscription), it doesn't very well serve that purpose. Ideally, a fuller description of extra-spectral colors could happen in this article itself. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 19:08, 23 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :I cited a source for the color description because there's no well agreed-upon definition, and three dictionaries agreed on purplish-red. I was thinking perhaps it's more accurate to say it traditionally referred to a deep purplish-red associated with the dye, but now refers to a wider range of colors. However, but I'll change it back to pinkish pink. Rewording the dye sentence could indicate that some uses are archaic, I didn't catch that, but I'll just link to fuchsine as you suggest. -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 00:33, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :: I'd rather not call it &quot;purplish pink&quot; either. I don't think that's any more accurate than &quot;purplish red&quot;. Instead what we should do is say &quot;it's ≈ Lab hue angle such-and-such&quot;, or &quot;it's any color that matches the hue of such-and-such range of wavelengths&quot;, or similar. Don't bother changing it from purplish-red to purplish-pink: &quot;magenta&quot; as usually defined is a hue about halfway between &quot;purple&quot; and &quot;red&quot;. Just I don't think dictionaries are particularly great sources for that information. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 00:43, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :: I also think that there's reasonable consensus about what color &quot;magenta&quot; is. It just doesn't happen to match what gets called &quot;magenta&quot; in computer graphics, which came about by just picking the nearest color name matching the hue that resulted from mixing the kinds of R and B lights in RGB displays. That the hue of this color is somewhat different than the hue previously understood to be &quot;magenta&quot; is unfortunate, but I don't think it changes any agreement about what &quot;magenta&quot; means in general. --[[user:jacobolus|jacobolus]] [[User_talk:jacobolus|(t)]] 00:51, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::: I changed it before I read this, but I'll leave further edits to someone else. Indeed, it refers to a pretty broad range. I think the opening paragraph should strive for accessibility for a topic this simple, something a ten-year-old might understand. A range of intervals in nanometers for two wavelengths (or terahertz, angles, etc.) isn't mean much to most people. :-) -[[User:Agyle|Agyle]] 01:08, 24 September 2007 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Transparency use of magenta (magic pink) ==<br /> <br /> Some programs use magenta on their sprites to represent transparency. I'd like to know something 'bout it and maybe add that information to the article. It's written in the portuguese version (translated): &quot;Also is used a lot as transparency regulator.&quot; &lt;small&gt;—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/201.3.159.228|201.3.159.228]] ([[User talk:201.3.159.228|talk]]) 14:29, 14 June 2008 (UTC)&lt;/small&gt;&lt;!-- Template:UnsignedIP --&gt; &lt;!--Autosigned by SineBot--&gt;<br /> <br /> Someone wrote about this in the article [[Magic Pink]]. [[User:Keraunos|Keraunos]] ([[User talk:Keraunos|talk]]) 00:46, 23 August 2008 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :It might be true, but unless someone can produce a source, it shouldn't be so claimed in wikipedia. Certainly it doesn't need a whole article with a different name for the same color. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 01:17, 23 August 2008 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Chemical Compostition ==<br /> <br /> I'm curious to find out the process involved in the fabrication of this colour. Apart for briefly mentioning Process Magenta used in printing, this article focuses far to much, in my opinion on the electronic magenta and its Hex-Dec numbers.<br /> Does no-one care to mention Quinacridone PR122 (the modern chemically produced pigement) or the history of its producion. Which is widely available in modern paints such as Old Holland Magenta.<br /> I would be very interested in this information, and furthermore on anything relating to the traditional pigments that preceeded it. <br /> &lt;ref&gt;tube of paint Old Holland Paint in front of me, D181&lt;/ref&gt;<br /> Thanks<br /> [[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]] ([[User talk:Cageybee|talk]]) 20:18, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]][[User:Cageybee|Cageybee]] ([[User talk:Cageybee|talk]]) 20:18, 29 June 2009 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Magenta as a spectral color ==<br /> <br /> See the discussion at [[User_talk:Dicklyon#Magenta_Color]] and [[User_talk:110.174.23.139#Magenta]]. I plan to stay out of it and let someone else try to talk reason with him. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 04:07, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> :Seems to me that any wavelength of monochromatic light that stimulated the red cones and blue cones equally would also stimulate the green cones. I would not think that that would produce the same perceived color as a mix of red monochromatic light and blue monochromatic light which stimulated only the red and blue cones.[[User:Constant314|Constant314]] ([[User talk:Constant314|talk]]) 21:24, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> ::That's right; any wavelength that stimulates the long and short [[cone cell]]s about equally is called green. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 22:25, 20 December 2010 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Reason is fine but lets just clarify whats being said, please. The idea that is being promoted is of two distinct colors of light enter the eye and are combineed to produce a color (in this case Magenta).<br /> <br /> However ...<br /> <br /> White light is a wavefront with power(energy) equally distributed across the visible frequency spectrum. When the wavefront has power levels distributed at different frequencies so that some parts the spectrum have more or less power, then we call that a color. The wavefront that impacts the eye to produce the sensation of Magenta has high power levels in the lower and higher frequencies and low power levels in the center frequencies. It is just one wavefront but shaped in power intensity vs frequency. There is no such thing as different colors of light waves, only a wavefront that has a power vs frequency shape. As such there are not incoming different frequencies of light to produce a color, its just one wavefront. No separate blue or red light enters the eye to be combined and produce a color. The color is inherent in the energy distribution of the wavefront which stimulates the frequency sensitive biological receptors in proportion to the power levels within the wavefront.<br /> <br /> It is for this reason that Magenta is (as are all colors) spectral. It is the energy vs frequency distribution of the incoming wavefront that produces the perceived color sensation. Any color you like can be produced by a single tunable light source through modulation.<br /> <br /> One wavefront .... not seperate incoming light colors.<br /> [[Special:Contributions/110.174.23.139|110.174.23.139]] ([[User talk:110.174.23.139|talk]]) 03:57, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> ::You can also combine red light from one source and blue from another and get the sensation on magenta. Thats how a color monitor creates magenta. [[User:Constant314|Constant314]] ([[User talk:Constant314|talk]]) 05:02, 18 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :Copied from my reply on my talk page:<br /> <br /> :I'm not sure what you mean by &quot;wavefront&quot; here, but I agree that in general the light coming in can be described as having a spectrum and that different spectral shapes appear as different colors. That's all good. But &quot;spectral color&quot; has a meaning: it means a color that can be separated out of the spectrum as a single narrow frequency or wavelength range. Spectral colors are the colors on the curved outer edge of the CIE xy chromaticity diagram, or other chromaticity diagram (uv, or whatever). These are the colors you get by putting white light through a prism. That's what spectral color means, and magenta is not among those. Right? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon#top|talk]]) 06:04, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> :And a bit more:<br /> <br /> :When we describe magenta as a combination of red and blue light, that's probably slightly sloppy wording. It's not that the different light wave frequencies inherent have red and blue colors, but that if we viewed those wavelengths alone they would appear as red and blue. But it's also not true that one color, magenta, enters the eye. What enters the eye is a spectrum of light, as you note. If the spectrum looks like the spectrum of a red color plus the spectrum of a blue color, it will ellicit the percept of magenta. I think we are all in agreement on that. Just need to come to share an understanding of the definition of &quot;spectral color&quot;; it's not just any color ellicited by a spectrum; on the contrary, it's only those colors that one gets via spectral analysis, or separation of the wavelengths, as by a prism or a diffraction grating. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 06:21, 17 January 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> == Variations of magenta ==<br /> <br /> There's obviously no reason why both [[Magenta]] and [[Variations of magenta]] should contain near-identical information about the three &quot;main&quot; versions. It should be removed from one of them, so it's clear what each article covers. The most logical solution, to me, appears to be that the information about those three versions should be removed from the Variations article, and the main Magenta article can say, &quot;For information about additional variations, see [[Variations of magenta]].&quot; Or, the information about those three versions could be removed from the main Magenta article, which could say, &quot;For information about variations of Magenta, see [[Variations of magenta]].&quot;<br /> <br /> In any case, the link to [[Variations of magenta]] should be more prominent than it is now, and I'm about to cram it in somewhere, but I have no idea how to do it logically because &quot;If you want to read pretty much the same information from this article, plus some other stuff, click here&quot; doesn't have a very nice ring to it. [[User:Theoldsparkle|Theoldsparkle]] ([[User talk:Theoldsparkle|talk]]) 20:59, 26 April 2011 (UTC)<br /> <br /> Alternatively we could merge the articles? [[User:Carlaxs|Carlaxs]] ([[User talk:Carlaxs|talk]]) 22:24, 16 June 2011 (UTC)</div> 76.16.18.252