Linux Color Management Hackfest idea

Sirko brought up the idea to organise a hackfest together with developers of applications for Linux desktops and experts interested in colour management. The idea behind that event was to bring interested developers together, support them in implementing color management in their software and move forward that topic across desktops and distributions.

During the recent LGM we found a chance to involve Richard Hughes and planed together about what we like to do during the hackfest. We spotted three main areas of interest: desktop applications including window managers, web browsers and printing. These topics are already worked on, but in a scattered way.

As example, Gwenview is a really great application for managing pictures. But it has no color management implemented yet. Color management in KWin is worked on during the GSoC this year, but in the opposite color management in the compositing manager mutter on the GNOME side is far away as can be read here. Not many web browsers support color management and if they who do, it is often incomplete. The SVG v2 standard will for example introduce additional color management features compared to SVG v1. So it is now the right time to get these implemented in order to be well prepared. For the KDE printing stack there is also a GSoC project this year, but also the Linux Foundation has a working group for this topic.

So, by meeting in person in one place, we want to get something done and build a good understanding of the role of each participating group for a working end to end colour management.

The hackfest will very likely happen in Brno in the Czech Republic at the Red Hat offices. A good time appears later this year 16th till 19th November. Now we like to collect more ideas, speak to people and sort financial issues.

ArgyllCMS V1.4.0 Released

The new version of the cross platform Colour Management System comes with new features and bug fixes.

  • ccxxmake can create correction matrixes using a reference colorimeter
  • support JPEG in cctiff, tiffgamut and extracticc
  • support display calibration and profiling on display without VideoLUT
  • support directing colour patches to a web browser for measurements and profiling

The ChangeLog contains the full list of modifications.

About: ArgyllCMS is the primary tool set in the open source world to access colour measurement devices and to create ICC profiles. Together with it’s colour conversion and analysis capabilities it is located in the tool box of many colour management professionals. Several freely distributed graphical front ends exist for ease of handling.

OpenICC Google Summer of Code 2012 projects

OpenICC obtained three project slots for the Google Summer of Code 2012
stipends. That means three students can work again this year full time over
three summer months on colour management projects. Thanks to Google for
organising and sponsoring the program.

Here are in short the projects:

Joseph Simon will continue to work on PDF colour management for the
KDE/Linux printing stack. To have a real world project he choose to implement
Colour Management for Krita Printing.

Casian Andrej will work on ICC KWin colour correction using the X Color
Management spec. That way KWin gets a clear path toward consistent colour
output on the desktop.

Nitin Chada will work on different toolkit dependent renderers for a
XForms subset inside the Simple Toolkit Abstraction project. That standalone project shall enable modules to present
options inside dialogs or embedded in host applications.

Lets have a successful coding summer and deserve the trust Google putted in
the OpenICC organisation and with that in the participating students.

Colour Management GSoC projects

There is already much written about Google Summer of Code. I just want to point you to a bunch of cool colour management (CM) project ideas.

OpenICC lists some ideas, which are interesting for cross desktop CM, especially for start in bringing CM to toolkits. Interested students are basically free to select one toolkit, which fits them most.

The CMM’s for Oyranos idea shall ease access to the upcoming spectral imaging capabilities inside the ICC architecture and to use smart CMM’s like ArgyllCMS was demoed doing stand alone and within ColorSync. Smart CMMs allow to optimise colour conversions for a images and devices, which will show up in more lively photographs.

The OpenGTL/OpenCL meta backend for the Oyranos CMM framework will enable us to write CMM’s, which run on the GPU instead of the CPU. That would potentially bring a big speed improvement for deploying applications through a simple CMS API.

One student proposed to work on characterisation based ICC colour correction inside KWin, which will fly over any of the old style per single channel gamma calibration. If you like to get ride of each monitor showing you a different saturated red, green or blue desktop background, then go ahead and propose a similar project for one of your favorite compositing window managers to the openSUSE or OpenICC orgs.

And of course there are printing related CM project ideas. One for CM printing with Krita and one project for general CM print queue setup in KolorManager.

icc-profiles-openicc 1.3.1

The new minor release of the icc-profiles-openicc package contains a newly created ProPhoto-RGB.icc profile. It was peer reviewed by the OpenICC group. The profile is intended for use in cameraRAW applications like digikam. ProPhoto-RGB covers the very wide colour gamut of modern photo sensors. One difference to existing profile versions of the colour space is it’s liberal licensing.

OpenICC is a group of colour management and imaging experts and several open source and proprietary projects on freedesktop.org .

ArgyllCMS V1.3.6 Released

Argyll Color Management           System Logo

ArgyllCMS author Graeme Gill released a new version of his cross platform colour management solution.The new version provides support for new devices, improvements and bug fixes.

  • new Spyder 4 display colorimeter supported (Note that the user must supply calibration data)
  • new experimental support for ColorHug display colorimeter (read instruction how to enable)
  • add -y option for extended display selection and tweak integration times

The later feature hints, that some newer instruments speed up with measurement times and need now more careful adjustments in order to not interfere with display frequencies.

About: ArgyllCMS is the primary tool set in the open source world to access colour measurement devices and to create ICC profiles. Together with it’s colour conversion and analysis capabilities it is located in the tool box of many colour management professionals. Several freely distributed graphical front ends exist for ease of handling.

CLT 2012 Impressions

Chemnitzer Linux-Tage was this year again a great event. The mainly german speaking visitors enjoyed a well organised fair of mixed open source community and business booths, talks and workshops.

On the Oyranos project booth discussed old friends various colour management topics and concepts. We felt that colour management terms and concepts inside the open source community are behind the awareness of other comparable graphic techniques like for instance font rendering. The more I find it amazing, that there is a core of users, which try hard to understand ICC techniques.

One topic with neighboring openSUSE people was of course the strong rose awareness around colour management during the recent discussions on the KDE core-devel list. What I found encouraging is, many people inside the KDE community see it important to collaborate. And so I think we in the OpenICC community should accelerate on our formal recommendation efforts for sharing colour data and configurations. An other related point was made, that it would be not helpful to stall projects in a too long wait for constructive discussions to come to live. I tried this sometimes and see now that balance between discussion and start for actual work could be improved. Good to get so many feedback about OpenICC core stuff in great face to face discussions.

With openSUSE’es Tom I discussed his improvements on the new open build service (OBS) search page layout, which is a great ongoing work. But much to my surprise he could point me to a nice and long wanted OBS feature, which I now integrated into the Oyranos download pages. That is, OBS provides embeddable download instructions for each distribution package of a project. These easy instructions show end users, how to install the desired software including all dependencies from OBS. Thanks for this valuable hint, which makes our colour management packages in OBS much more accessible to our users.

Looking around I found the mageia distribution interesting and would find it great to see this distribution integrated into OBS once a successful version 2 comes out this spring. But of course there are other interesting distributions out there to integrate into OBS. One advantage of OBS for me as a maintainer is as well, that I can test my packages prior to release in one go.

On the FFmpeg booth we discussed the idea that 3D lookup textures are a very simple way of exchanging colour transforms. I will surely look deeper into this and want to find a useful format to exchange 3D shader data for OpenGL textures. In CompICC a 16-bit PPM image helped for debugging. Lets see if we can find a more common and useful format to reuse.

LGM 2012 talks

As mentioned in a post before, the Libre Graphics Meeting will be held in Vienna from 2th until 5th of May this 2012. I have now submitted my talks and will hopefully know in some days if they are accepted.

OyranosColour Management a la Greek: will give a overview about some technical concepts for platform independent color management systems.
Evolving Concepts for Colour Management: will summarise the ongoing ideas and discussions on the freedesktop working group OpenICC.

Like in the years before, there is a chance to meet with students of the upcoming Google Summer of Code projects.

Sirko submitted Taxi DB - Call A Cab To Bring The Colors: which describes the idea behind the ICC profile database and hopefully we getting some feedback and ideas, on how to make sure, that the quality of the profiles will be high.

Markus Raab has submitted a talk about Elektra, which is used as DB API by Oyranos. I hope that will show new lively developments in Elektra ;-)

I am sure the self-styled competitor will also be around and give an talk about his view on color management.

If we can get to useful work on specs on a OpenICC round table for the sake of cross desktop compatibility, then even better.

Gustav likes to attend the Libre Graphics Meeting, but he needs some support to get there. We should help him, so that he can meet Boudewijn Rempt and some others from Krita, who can help him to find his way to the KDE community. But he needs some money for travelling. And there are still some other requests for generosity I mentioned before.

Tupi Libre Graphics Meeting Tatica
Click here to lend your support to: Libre Graphics Meeting Presentation and make a donation at www.pledgie.com ! Click here to lend your support to: Libre Graphics Meeting 2012 Vienna and make a donation at www.pledgie.com ! Click here to lend your support to: Tatica travels to LGM and make a donation at www.pledgie.com !

Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM) is coming along nicely and will surely become again a cool event for the FLOSS community. LGM is this year co-located with the Linuxwochen Vienna and their Call for Papers is still open until 1st of April.

CompICC-0.8.5 released

A new version of the compiz plugin for ICC colour correction of monitors is released. This release is a feature release.

Changes Overview:

  • new support per region ICC profiles
  • new switch to X Color Management specification
  • require libXcm-0.5.0 and Oyranos-0.4.0

Changes from 0.8.4:

  • fix alpha blending
  • speed up load time (cache the transformed pixels in memory)

About:
The project brings you instant desktop colour correction on GPU through the compiz window manager (0.7.x/0.8.x). It supports multi monitors and live connecting. The implicite colour conversion appears on the fly. To opt out of colour correction for specialised graphics applications the X Color Management spec 0.4 is supported. Devices can be configured through the Oyranos Colour Management System.

ChangeLog:
http://compicc.git.sourceforge.net/git/gitweb.cgi?p=compicc/compicc;a=shortlog;h=refs/tags/0.8.5

git git://compicc.git.sourceforge.net/gitroot/compicc/compicc
git sha1: c963bdbc7aa4bf9703f3c87f82734d1223ff7d63
package: http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/compicc/Compicc/compicc-0.8.5.tar.bz2
size: 76548 Byte
sha1sum: 902f2ea6b9c0aabe91297f6b80dd1f5ef9f910d1 compicc-0.8.5.tar.bz2
md5sum: 41a1a08c82ee18025d535c3dbc86aaf8 compicc-0.8.5.tar.bz2
Linux RPM: http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/multimedia:/color_management/