Comment by crazygringo
2 months ago
You don't see the pixels when you zoom in? Try again:
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/rss...
If you don't see jaggy pixel edges to the letters and form elements, what do you see?
2 months ago
You don't see the pixels when you zoom in? Try again:
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/rss...
If you don't see jaggy pixel edges to the letters and form elements, what do you see?
Are you saying that I'm saying that there are no pixels in the document? Like, do you think that I think that scanners have come to operate on pure platonic forms and no longer use the concept of pixels? That would be really cool, wouldn't it. But no, I don't believe that. Hm. Where did this conversation go wrong. I think I was unclear in my last statement. I have yet to see someone show the original scribbles or ink marks that these OCR layers were generated based on. That's what I meant by "destructive". Now, I'm no expert on documents, so you might want to just cut your losses and stop trying to educate me and let me be uneducated in this matter. I'll accept that I don't know what I'm talking about, and reduce my criticisms of this whole thing to pointing out that the explanations don't make sense to me.
> Are you saying that I'm saying that there are no pixels in the document?
I genuinely don't know what you're saying.
> Like, do you think that I think that scanners have come to operate on pure platonic forms and no longer use the concept of pixels? That would be really cool, wouldn't it.
Yes, because that is absolutely a thing. That's what Adobe ClearScan does, converting pixels to smooth vector outlines. Zoom in, and zero pixels in OCR'd text. That's not the case in this file though.
> I have yet to see someone show the original scribbles or ink marks that these OCR layers were generated based on. That's what I meant by "destructive".
I still genuinely don't know what you mean. The original scribbles and ink marks are a physical piece of paper. The MRC layers are generated from the scan and don't destroy anything, they only separate. The resulting layered bitmap is identical, pixel-for-pixel. My best interpretation of what you're saying is you want a higher-resolution scan? But why? Again, nothing "destructive" has happened except maybe reducing the resolution. But "destructive" is not a word people usually use for that.
> so you might want to just cut your losses and stop trying to educate me and let me be uneducated in this matter
I can't tell if you're being sarcastic or not. I am genuinely happy to help you understand, but if you really don't want to then obviously I won't spend any more time replying. But if you're going to publicly throw suspicion on the validity of the birth certificate, I feel it's important to correct the record here on HN simply for other people who might read this exchange.
I'm starting to understand where this conversation diverged. I'm coming from a place of having read the Snopes page and watched the videos linked there. I think understanding where I'm at, is a good place to start trying to explain it to me. To put it more clearly, at this point I've seen a video that seems to show that the PDF has a collection of layers, some contain text and one contains the page below. Now, it seems like you were saying that the text layers are just the pixels from the page moved up to a new layer. I said that I think that's surprising. Then we got caught up on the meaning of the words "original pixels". I probably should have said: a full buffer of pixels from the CCD sensor, perhaps with resolution reduction or compression, but nothing moved to new layers (whether that's normally considered "destructive" or not is another issue).
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