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Different colors (Score:3, Interesting)
My two eyes see different colors. This is actually quite weird and I wonder if that affects other people...
Re: Different colors (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: Different colors (Score:3)
I am a neuroscientist, mainly in vision, not an ophthalmologist.. but I have sat in on quite a bit of ophthalmology, done orbital dissections etc etc.. Very few physical things (ie. pressure based) can effect color perception. The main one is that you have something (either tumor, or spurious bone growth) that's pinching or entrapping your optic nerve (basically like carpel tunnel). If the same were happening to me, I'd make sure to get referred to an ophthalmology department at a research hospital and get a CAT scan to make sure nothing is growing behind the orbit.
Re: Different colors (Score:3)
Actually it's pretty easy to demonstrate, just go out in bright sunlight, close one eye for a while, then note the difference. One eye will seem blue-shifted.
Also, myopia affects color vision. There's some famous painter (whose name I ironically forget) who was severely myopic, as in walk-into-the-walls myopic. This was once put forth for an explanation as to why his portraits were "too red" (this was before impressionism spoiled everything).
Anyway, if your distance vision is not the same in both eyes, yes, they can see color slightly different. I'm R-20/40 and L-20/80, and my left eye sees the world slightly more pink than my right. (Not usually noticeable, except when staring at this broad swath of grey on my monitor. Then I can really see it. But I have extremely discerning color vision. I can distinguish fine shades most people can't. So do most people in my mom's family.)
Re: Different colors (Score:3)
Both of the effects you describe are because the fovea has thicker ganglion cell density than non-foveal regions, which can induce a color bias over the several central degrees of your visual field. It's not 100% clear to me whether the GP is describing a visual hemifield effect, or an eye based effect (in the case of hemifields, each eye sends half its signal to each visual cortex)... but either way, it doesn't to me sound like a fovea-based bias.
(To clarify, by physical thing, I meant something that is both involuntarily induced, and non-constant)
Re: Different colors (Score:2)
How is this characteristic called?
Not a clue. Until now, I was unaware that anyone else experienced it. Even my opthamologist was unaware of the condition--I had to fight to get non-tinted lenses a few years back because the tint screwed up my color perception when I was trying to match colors on the job.
Re: Different colors (Score:2)
This may be related to blood flow. Seeing blue is a side effect of the vasodilation of Viagra making the blue receptors over represented. (not a doctor)
Re:Different colors (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Different colors (Score:5, Funny)
Are you sure you're not just rotating at relativistic velocities?
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
He lives too close to a black hole.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Well....not today...
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
I thought different pupil sizes are a rare condition. My oldest son has different size pupils when it's a little dark. One pupil gets more than twice the size of the other. This has changed a little when he almost lost an eye during a soccer match.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
I see deeper shades of green with my left eye. I have not noticed it with any other colors, only that it is very noticeable in the summer with all the green around. The difference is kind of like the difference between a cheap LED monitor and a plasma TV. I asked my optician about it last time I was in, and she said it was quite common.
Re:Different colors (Score:5, Funny)
My two eyes see different colors. This is actually quite weird and I wonder if that affects other people...
Since you asked: no, it doesn't bother me in the slightest that you have this problem.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
I guess no two eyes are the same, that goes for one person's eyes too. I see colors more bright with one eye than the other. At the tennis court, one with orange gravel, my left eye sees the gravel as a faded orange, while the right eye sees it as bright orange.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
I guess no two eyes are the same, that goes for one person's eyes too.
True. Having two left eyes or two right eyes would be awkward.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
True. Having two left eyes or two right eyes would be awkward.
Yes it is: just ask Picasso's models.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Re:Different colors (Score:3)
Different materials have different abilities to focus white light. Just about every lens-quality material will not bend the components of white light equally and will end up spreading them out a bit. This manifests itself as red and blue/violet tinges. It's called chromatic abberation and it's measured by something called an Abbe number.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromatic_aberration
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abbe_number
Polycarbonate lenses drive me nuts because their Abbe number is too low; everything looks like an old-school 3-D movie (without looking at it through the red/blue 3D glasses) to me when I wear them.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Ahhhh, so I'm not alone! I hate the damn things! Grew up with glass lenses, and there is NO comparison. I never stop seeing the damned poly lenses as if there's poorly-cleaned glass in front of my eyes.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Re: Different colors (Score:2)
I pass the colour-blindness tests very quickly with each eye. However, colour intensity varies between my eyes. One eye sees a bright world. It's a more faded world with the other eye. I attribute the difference to ageing rods/cones/whatever. I didn't have this problem when I was younger.
Re:Different colors (Score:2)
Turn off fox news. They'll go away.
Very genetically linked (Score:3)
No one in my family, both lineage and extended, is colorblind at all. My wife's father was very R-G color blind and it seems my son is mildly as well.
Re:Very genetically linked (Score:2)
They probably are. My maternal grandfather was R/G colorblind, as am I. I have two daughters, and a geneticist said their sons are very likely to carry the gene.
Re:Very genetically linked (Score:2)
What he basically said was that all of the ancestors *on his side* of the family are all pure and without fault, but that his wife screwed everything up because she had an instance of colourblindness on her side. He probably didn`t even know about the impurity of her genes until the damage had already been done. Reading between the lines a bit, you definitely get the sense that the guy is a little pissed off about the whole thing and is annoyed at his wife...
I am not colorblind (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:5, Interesting)
I have had my eyes checked regularly as I wear glasses and have since age five. They test for colorblindness when you get your eyes checked. WTF is up with "as far as I know?"
First off, people whose vision is normal don't tend to get regular eye exams. You take a test in school when you're in grade school, they say "Congratulations! You're 20/20!", and aside from a perfunctory "Please read line 4" at the DMV, they don't worry about their eyesight until age 60 or so, when you start to need reading glasses. It's only people who regularly wear corrective lenses who go for eye exams regularly, to make sure their prescription is still doing the job.
Secondly, the colorblindness test they do as part of a normal eye exam is rather poor for detecting mild colorblindness. You see a faint and indistinct "5" in the dots, and you're lumped together with everyone who sees a clear and unambiguous "5". There's plates in the back of the book which can help tease this out, but standard eye exams don't usually go that far. They do the first few pages which are good for severe deficiencies, but not for more mild ones. I don't know about your eye exam place, but the ones I've gone to typically don't even do that. They might have done it once for the first visit, but for repeat visits they tend not to. (I presume they rely on the notation in the charts.)
I've worn glasses since I was 10, and it was only in my late 20s that I learned I had mild red/green colorblindness. And that was only because I insisted that I get a thorough test from my eye doctor. The result actually raised a bit of a mild concern, as changes in color vision can indicate serious eye issues. I checked out clean, though, and they said I probably have had (undiagnosed) mild colorblindness for my entire life. Which explains a lot, in fact. I've historically had difficulties with colors on the computer, with bright yellow and bright green being well on indistinguishable. (Whch is hell for those computer games where you're matching up yellow items and green items under a time limit.) I also have a hard time telling the difference between black text and red text on projected slides. (Annoying when presenters "highlight" text by changing the color to red.) Those annoyances were actually the reason why I insisted I get a decent color vision test - there was a series of things where I complained that certain colors were indistinguishable, and people around me looked like I grew another head, saying that the difference was patently obvious.
So, yes, it is completely possible to be unaware of being colorblind, even despite having regular eye exams.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:3)
I've historically had difficulties with colors on the computer, with bright yellow and bright green being well on indistinguishable. (Whch is hell for those computer games where you're matching up yellow items and green items under a time limit.) I also have a hard time telling the difference between black text and red text on projected slides. (Annoying when presenters "highlight" text by changing the color to red.) Those annoyances were actually the reason why I insisted I get a decent color vision test - there was a series of things where I complained that certain colors were indistinguishable, and people around me looked like I grew another head, saying that the difference was patently obvious.
So, yes, it is completely possible to be unaware of being colorblind, even despite having regular eye exams.
The issues you experienced with colors show that being completely unaware seems unlikely. Maybe someone who is very shy and never mentioned their difficulty with certain things might not find out it wasn't "normal" though.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
Also, color sensitivity may decrease with age. My maternal grandmother was, by the time she died, was only able to perceive highly saturated colors--everything else was either muddy brown or grey. I've also noticed that my mother, who is an artist now in her 60s, is losing the ability to distinguish subtle shades of various colors. As for color-blindness, my father was red-green colorblind, but while its effects was barely noticeable when he was in his 20s-30s, by the time he was in his 70s it was becoming a serious problem.
I get my eyes tested annually.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:5, Informative)
Perhaps you're not colorblind but there are degrees of color acuity.
Try this test - http://www.xrite.com/online-co... [xrite.com]
Depending on the monitor & the ambient lighting, I've scored anywhere from 4 - 32
And there are much more difficult tests of color acuity.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
So this is the 1st time I've retaken this test since Feb and I scored 4, made some errors in the green hues. But I probably got lucky on some tiles as there were a few I swapped around a 1/2 dozen times.
Total time to complete was about 6 mins which is about average for me but slow compared to some of my colleagues.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
That was the most evil thing I have done. Scored 10.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure you would have, just been excluded from some jobs. 25 year retiree and red-green color blind.
At my induction physical I failed 14 of 15 color cards. Tech told me I was color blind and I replied all you had to do was ask me I could have told you that.
BTW: Purple does not exist and is a conspiracy by the color-normal people against the disabled.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:3)
I have had cataract surgery in both eyes, but I don't have aphakia. In both cases, I had artificial lenses put in that completely corrected my astigmatism and changed me from being severely nearsighted to slightly farsighted. (I need reading glasses for closeup work because my minimum focus is about two feet.) My ophthalmologist was slightly disappointed because I didn't quite end up with perfect vision. I know a number of other people who've had cataracts removed and all of them now have artificial lenses.
I can now claim to be at least partly bionic because I have ocular implants and adjustable augmented hearing.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:3)
Modern artificial lenses filter UV. But some brands of lenses are more UV transparent than others. Only if you remove the lenses entirely will you have the full effect.
Monet is a famous example. After his cataract surgery, he painted in blue/green pigments that supposedly reflected more UV to try to copy what he saw.
Anyway, pics or it didn't happen: http://www.komar.org/faq/colorado-cataract-surgery-crystalens/ultra-violet-color-glow/ [komar.org]
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
Black lights have ALWAYS looked like the bottom picture to me -- and are blindingly bright. To my eyes, the little bug zapper lights up the room.
This is no doubt why I'm in love with polarized sunglasses.
Re:I am not colorblind (Score:2)
When did you have the surgery? Sounds like it went really well. Hadn't heard about it, but as you know I've moved to a planet far far away.
Sorry I couldn't be there in person to witness your transformation into a bionic man! :D
Tetra-chromats ? Anyone? (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone out there laughing at the pitiful earthlings with their puny RGB vision?
Re:Tetra-chromats ? Anyone? (Score:2, Funny)
Considering that Slashdot's poll options max out at 8 candidates; there should have been an option at the bottom "I am a Tetrachromat you insensitive clod!"
Re:Tetra-chromats ? Anyone? (Score:2, Informative)
Tetra-chromats are by definition female. You need two x chromosomes to carry the two different genes that code the two slightly different pigments.
It's an axiom that there are no women on the internet.
Ergo, there are no tetra-chromats on Slashdot.
Re:Tetra-chromats ? Anyone? (Score:3)
In humans, Tetra-chromats are by definition female.
Re:Tetra-chromats ? Anyone? (Score:4, Interesting)
By necessity, not by definition.
It is conceivable, though as yet utterly unheard of, that tetrachromatism could come about by another mechanism, one that does not require both X chromosomes. Artificial retinas are one such path.
Mantis Shrimp (Score:3)
I for one welcome our Mantis Shrimp Overlords!
http://theoatmeal.com/comics/m... [theoatmeal.com]
Blank poll? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm black-grey colour blind, can someone tell me what this poll is about?
Re:Blank poll? (Score:3)
. . . I think that it is some kind of double-blind test to see if you are racist, or something like that.
Which races are blue and green, again? And are Silicon Valley companies hiring enough of them . . . ?
Re:Blank poll? (Score:2)
how did you know it was a poll?
Combination (Score:3)
I am severely red-green color blind. I am midly blue-yellow color blind.
And the correct term is Color Deficiency Disorder, you insenstive clod.
Re:Combination (Score:5, Funny)
No, the insensitive clots are cataracts.
Re:Combination (Score:2)
Same here, but I can add mildly orange/brown to that.
Missing Option (Score:4, Funny)
I'm a UI designer for Slashdot...
Re:Missing Option (Score:2)
Then please bring back OMG Ponies. The colorblind won't mind either way and everyone else loves it.
Re:Missing Option (Score:2)
he makes us wish we were
Raising awareness is good (Score:3, Interesting)
Not being colorblind myself I have found myself making awkward mistakes in the past; producing documents with graphs where all lines only had different colors. Or making a website where a background changes from green to red if something goes wrong. A colorblind person will have a hard time telling what is what. The golden rule is to differentiate twice, like have a graph with colored lines but also using different line patterns at the same time. Or not just change a background color, but blink it at the same time. The poll shows (at least) 10% would be helped with a little better interface designs.
Re:Raising awareness is good (Score:2)
This is generically recommended for scientific presentations.
My dad's colorblind (Score:3)
One time, he got the chore of painting his aunt's house. He went to the store, bought the paint, prepped the house, and painted it pink. His aunt was the only one who didn't think it was a hilarious way to find out about being colorblind.
Not a tetrachromat, for sure. (Score:2)
Being male, I can't be a tetrachromat, but on more than one occasion I've demonstrated better color discrimination than is considered typical for males (at least as I've been told by female graphic designers). Although rare, these defects do occur in females well -- I had a girlfriend who had difficulty distinguishing between pale pink, pale orange, tan, and light gray. This was limited to pastels though, she was fine once the color saturation got bumped up a bit.
Surprised me as hell the first time (Score:3)
According to the cute asian lady who checked my eyes last time, I'm colorblind (sure, I can still read color codes on capacitors and resistors), she explained to me they are different kinds of color blindness, Found out I can't see different shades of Orange (or Green) :(
Star Trek TAS (Score:3)
Multiple episodes show grey as pink (Klingon uniforms), because one of the guys was in fact colorblind to grey
Re:Star Trek TAS (Score:2)
Multiple episodes show grey as pink (Klingon uniforms), because one of the guys was in fact colorblind to grey
But can you see "Shades of Grey?" (thank you, I'm here 'til Thursday)
I am the opposite of colorblind. (Score:2)
I can even see octarine.
Re:I am the opposite of colorblind. (Score:2)
Me too. It's kind of purplish green
100% on Ishihara (Score:2)
I do Ishihara every time I renew my aviation medical certificate.
To respect the spirit of the test I make a point of not memorizing the numbers, and always call the number at a glance.
Some years ago I had a colleague who chose such odd colour combinations for her clothes we wondered if she had issues in this area. This is indeed unusual in a woman, but it happens.
...laura
Distinguishing shades (Score:2)
I seem to recall reading a stat some years back that approx 20% of men were colorblind to some degree; the percent for women was lower, but I don't remember it.
It can manifest in situations like; you have several pairs of socks, you wash them at the same time, but some are dark blue and some are black. You go to sort them and you can't distinguish in order to pair them up. Some people have tremendous difficulty telling the difference.
And judging by some of the house color choices in my neighborhood recently, colorblindness is becoming an epidemic!
Your missing two (Score:2, Interesting)
can see more colors (women only)
can see polarized light (rare)
Re:Your missing two (Score:2)
can see polarized light (rare)
This depends on what you mean by "see". Almost anyone can learn detect if a light source is polarized by looking for a (very very) faint rainbow effect around the focus of where you're looking. Put flat white on an LCD monitor and stare at it for a bit and you'll probably be able to see it yourself if you're looking for it.
Most of us have some weakness (Score:2)
If you passed the standard screening test in school, you probably thought you were perfect in this regard. Actually, most of us have some weakness and there are tests for that. Try this one [color-blindness.com]. It was rather tedious for me; one of the hardest perceptual tests I've taken. You need patience, so set aside some time. I got a TES (Total Error Score) of 12. YMMV because of monitor quality and other factors. The official version of this test uses actual physical tiles, and specifies what kind of lighting to use in the room.
Re:Most of us have some weakness (Score:2)
Neat test. I worked hard on it but only managed a Total Error Score of 236.
I already knew I was color vision challenged. My mother became suspicious when I was playing with crayons and I colored a fire engine green and the grass brown. That's why my wife picks the colors for my clothes and sorts my socks so I don't accidentally wear a non-matching pair - which has happened a few times.
Re:Most of us have some weakness (Score:2)
If you passed the standard screening test in school, you probably thought you were perfect in this regard. Actually, most of us have some weakness and there are tests for that. Try this one [color-blindness.com]. It was rather tedious for me; one of the hardest perceptual tests I've taken. You need patience, so set aside some time. I got a TES (Total Error Score) of 12. YMMV because of monitor quality and other factors. The official version of this test uses actual physical tiles, and specifies what kind of lighting to use in the room.
Good news, everyone! The results of the color blindness test are in, and we also have a new policy regarding who is no longer allowed to change the tail lights on the ship...
Not colorblind, but .. (Score:5, Interesting)
Worse: (Score:2)
Cut the brown wire, not the grey wire ...
Mildy colourblind under low light levels (Score:2)
What would true color vision be like? (Score:4, Interesting)
A normal human sees three colors. We are incapable of distinguishing true orange light from an essentially infinite number of combinations of color pairs (e.g., red plus a bit of green, or red plus more yellow). All we can say is that two chemicals were stimulated in the proper proportion.
It needn't be this way. Your ears detect individual frequencies. If you hear two tones at 1kHz and 2KhZ, your ears don't average them together and tell you that there is a single tone at 1.5 kHz
What would true color vision be like, i.e., if your eyes could actually tell what frequencies of light they received?
Re:What would true color vision be like? (Score:2)
Ears give us a lot of frequency information but very little spacial information.
Eyes give us a lot of spacial information but very little frequency information.
Our eyes are already the highest information rate of our senses, "true color vision" would increase that even more. Could our brain cope?
Re:What would true color vision be like? (Score:2)
And our noses give a truly enormous amount of chemical information, but have extremely poor time resolution. BTW, I'm not sure about our eyes being the highest information rate of our senses. Our sense of touch puts out a huge amount of information, but we're very good at filtering it.
Re:What would true color vision be like? (Score:2)
Eyes would be useless, as they would supply mostly noise and very little, if any, information. Deciphering this mess would need vastly more brain volume.
Oh, and designing a useful color monitor for computers would be horrendously complex.
Re:What would true color vision be like? (Score:2)
What would true color vision be like, i.e., if your eyes could actually tell what frequencies of light they received?
Pretty horrible I guess, this screen would have exactly three colors. From what I understand a lot of other objects only give off particular wavelengths too from their chemical composition, the rest is zero.
Re:What would true color vision be like? (Score:2)
Even painting would be completely incapable of producing realistic "colors," and we'd all just have to agree than the ochre blob really looks like a rose.
You could still mix the paint to be the color of a rose, since the rose's color is also just a pigment. Worst case, you get an actual rose and try to find some way to stabilize the pigments. We might have developed sophisticated organic chemistry at an earlier stage, simply so we could produce art. More likely, the artist's palette would simply have a lot more colors on it. Mixing would take more time and skill. Paintings would be more expensive. High-end painting was always for the wealthy anyway though, so I don't think art would have been hurt too badly. If mixing colors was too difficult, then the worst case is that art might have been dominated by grey scale techniques for a long period of time.
The task of developing a decent computer monitor sounds harder. Even then though, there would be some binning of frequencies. How much spectral resolution do you need to appreciate music? If I can barely tell the difference between C and C#, I will never be a great musician... but I might still be able to appreciate it on some level. If each pixel had 16 different frequencies and 16 levels, it would obviously not look real to people with high spectral resolution. OTOH, it would probably look better than monochrome. It might be like listening to a scratchy old AM radio--better than nothing.
15% of all males have some form of ... (Score:2)
This poll confirms this fact (assumption: Slashdot readers are predominantly male).
Missing option here (Score:2)
I am not colour blind, but I can only distinguish 8 colours, including black and white, because I simply don't care about the other shades. :)
Male only
Consistent with known incidence (Score:5, Interesting)
As I write this, 7% of votes are for "mild" and 1% for "severe" red-green colour blindness. Remarkably, about 8% of males are believed to suffer from red-green colour blindness. (It's perhaps reasonable to assume that great majority of slashdotters are male - if not, apologies to the ladies).
According to this test... (Score:2)
http://www.xrite.com/online-co... [xrite.com] ...I have rather good color perception for a male.
Re:According to this test... (Score:2)
Obig SImpsons quote (Score:4, Funny)
"As far as I know"? (Score:2)
I know for 100% fact I'm not colourblind...
An odd mild R-G - but only now do I know.... (Score:2)
I've known for 30 years that I was colour confused, it was diagnosed during my pre-hire medical at IBM. I've always described it symptomatically, as in "certain pinks and purples appear grey, my favourite brown shirt is green, but occasionally, I'll see a hint of green". And I've long thought that my CC was partly influenced by diet (the shirt would be greener after meals in certain restaurants, but I could never pin down the magic ingredient combo).
I have it on good authority that Mars is red, but I see it as a faint light of undetermined colour.
I had my eyes checked last week. I said all of the above to the examiner. He said something along the lines of "Huh, I've never heard of that before".
Then I described how I have a hard time scooping the yard: I have to work really hard to see the shit for the grass, but when I do, it becomes more obvious. There isn't enough contrast for me to pick it out without cognitive effort, but with said effort it becomes clear.
"Huh", he said, "It sounds like you have a very mild form of red-green colour blindness".
Interesting. I've never had a problem with traffic lights, red is one of my favourite colours, and I love the infinite variety of greens of spring. But picking a cardinal out in a dark green tree is tough - do-able, but tough. It's much easier in a light green tree.
So two weeks ago I would have answered "different form" but today I chose "mild R-G".
As my daughter would say, "That was a great old man story, thanks for sharing".
I know one guy who will never know... (Score:2)
When I was in high school my Biology 20 teacher found an old book in the library with various colour blindness test diagrams in it, and thought it would be fun to pass it around during class everyone could check it out.
On the the guys at the back of the class (you know the ones) cheated on it.
Allergic to peanuts... (Score:2)
I drove across the country with a good friend, who is severely red-green colorblind. About once a day, he would offer me peanuts, even though I'm deathly allergic to them, and then he'd laugh, and say "oh, these are really good." After five days of this, as we were driving across Colorado after a storm, I stopped to look at a stunning rainbow, and he's like "ooh, ok, fine, whatever"
He's a very successful computer animator and landscape painter. It helps that he is super-smart, but I still can't imagine how he does it.
Funny thing about colors. Are mice gray? (Score:2)
You always see mice shown as gray in cartoons, it's their default state. I've had mice, and they're a deep brown loamy earth color... but my friends still thought they were gray. So, I don't know what that's all about but, there appears to be ranges of color perception that aren't really clocked as "color blindness", which may not be an entirely useful phrase for something that isn't exactly binary. Now, if you specify that you're "red-green colorblind" that gives me some practical information. I'd probably still be curious as to what color you thought a mouse was.
Re:How should this poll converge? (Score:2)
The problem with this is that many people with red-green colorblindness (especially with the milder forms) are unaware of it. There's a reason why colorblindness as a disorder wasn't recognized until 1798...
Re:How should this poll converge? (Score:2)
according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C... [wikipedia.org]
"the common color vision defects is the red-green deficiency which is present in about 8 percent of males and 0.5 percent of females of Northern European ancestry."
The poll reflects at least that fairly well.
I am curious however that since I've been reading a little about why there is no mention of affects on depth perception {I say this because I'm in the 8% and I have a problem with depth perception when everything is the same color.}
Re:How should this poll converge? (Score:2)
I've only glanced at this in passing so I'm not 100% sure how accurate/legit it is but an interesting read non-the-less... Social Media demographics [pingdom.com]
Main takeaway:
Most male-dominated site? Slashdot (87% males) is the standout, followed by Hacker News (77% males) and Stack Overflow (76% males). In general, the more tech-focused sites in this survey have more male users than female.
Re:Strange results (Score:2)
Re:I'm just blind you insensitive clod (Score:3)
He thought this was reddit
Re:I always get asked.... (Score:2)
Re:I'm colorblind. (Score:2)
just give it time, the white and indian ones get wrinkled, the black one grow bubblebutts, the asian ones black liverwart spots. Hope that helps and hope I offended everyone.