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Just curious, how successful has Benny Landa been with his Nanographic Printing technology? Any personal experiences?
Interesting article, but it raises the question: If the Landa is as good as offset with a bit more contrast why not simply stick with offset and work on your profiles?
At the end of the day it´s not much faster and you can´t say it´s cheaper and... I am not getting where the added value is going to be.
...seeing that offset has been developed as far as the human eye can see and far as the human brain can process...
I would agree to disagree, the reception of the human eye is not a standardized tristimulus response which could be described in a (let´s say) ICC profile. How you see colour is in your brain and your brain alone. Perhaps I should have written that today´s offset is as good as the untrained eye can see and the untrained brain can process, so why spend a lot of money for Nanographic printing when a normal person can´t tell the difference (and simply doesn´t care) between prints from offset and prints from a landa?It's a digital press. It can do Digital Stuff™, like short runs, variable data, personalization, every-page-is-different etc.
Hardly. Standard offset color gamut is orders of magnitude smaller than what your eye can see. Even extended gamut leaves a lot to be desired. Print technology development is far from being "finished", in terms of its potential quality.
the reception of the human eye was standardized in 1931 in the CIEXYZ color space, and the entire color management concept is based on this standard observer.
Of course you "see" color with your brain, ultimately, but that is irrelevant
- the tests that were done in ~1930 to measure the standard observer's response took this into account.
why spend a lot of money for Nanographic printing when a normal person can´t tell the difference (and simply doesn´t care) between prints from offset and prints from a landa?
I very much doubt that without bending the laws of physics we will see something that will make our jaws drop in the next decade.
I agree, but it´s like pushing a boulder up an increasingly steep hill, at some point you find that you are using more and more energy for only little gain.No need to bend the laws of physics. There is plenty of room within the laws to make improvements. The problem is that there is a great need to have people who understand the laws and what is possible. People who don't use the laws of physics, develop technologies based on "trial and error" methods. They might apply engineering skills to make the technologies but they don't understand the rules that govern the processes. They start with wrong assumptions and that leads to poor outcomes.
I am optimistic that great innovation can be done for offset but not optimistic that it will be done.
I agree, but it´s like pushing a boulder up an increasingly steep hill, at some point you find that you are using more and more energy for only little gain.
Yes, I don't believe I can change people's minds. Maybe someone else in the future will.I’m genuinely curious; you say that believing in something is necessary before change can actually happen, and then go on to say that you don’t believe you can change people’s minds anymore. I assume this mostly has to do with positive ink flow, but does that mean you’ve given up on trying to further present any of your idea(s) to the industry?
I find that both interesting, and sad.
You mention ‘educating the industry’, and ‘rational thinking’.
Probably no one wants to continually try to educate someone, when they’re either feeling disrespected, or ignored.
I’m guessing that the high end producers have plenty of rational thinking. But because they’re already producing great product(s), they may not know about or need things to be any better. And the lower end producers simply have no idea (with little understanding), and/or don’t even care about it.
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