
Universalpsykopath tugs our coat and says: Tell us about your feats of deduction and the little mysteries you've solved. Alternatively, tell us about the simple, everyday things that mystified you for far too long.
( , Thu 13 Oct 2011, 12:52)
« Go Back

I was sat in a meeting with some pretty clever people when one of them (who was clearly bored by my presentation) asked the above questions. Despite repeated internet searches to find the solution I am still stumped. Projecting no light at all would just show the wall colour (even with the contrast of the surroundings).
Could someone clever explain/solve this as it's been doing my head in.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:18, 14 replies)

That's why you project onto a white screen in a darkened room.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:23, closed)

and the wall was white, the black image still came out as black. We even played by drawing a black and a white square next to each other. The white square was closer to the wall colour than the black.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:28, closed)

thing.
Same as colour pictures printed in the Financial Times. The page is orange, but you can look as hard as you like, and your brain will still tell you Barack Obamas teeth are sparkly white.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:29, closed)

I never noticed that. Probably because I've never purchased the FT. I'm off to the newsagents to look at it. and to buy some porn
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:31, closed)

www.michaelbach.de/ot/lum_adelsonCheckShadow/index.html
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 11:18, closed)

www.popularscience.co.uk/features/feat16.htm
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:35, closed)

You should ask for a refund.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:39, closed)

to be fair it's not a bad statement. My first source was the internet. From here I found several different explanations.
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:45, closed)

get bored quickly so start looking at porn. Lots and lots of lovely porn
( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 10:46, closed)

( , Thu 20 Oct 2011, 12:29, closed)
« Go Back