...and this type of replies is why it stays that way.
Well, at least when ignoring the UI/UX mention that has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion here (color correction is required in many fields, but UI and UX aren't really those ones).
The author seems to be technical enough to make a nice analysis of what's done and what needs to be done. I suspect he might be able to provide this particular fix himself - or, if he isn't, then he might be able to contribute by providing a well-detailed feature request for others to implement (with that even I might be able to go and fix it, while without it I surely won't, as I lack the knowledge, hardware and in fact even awareness of this problem; only reading this post put some light on it for me).
Some people don't do the mental switch between "I'll wait for fix" and "I'll fix it" if they're not used to it, even if they are perfectly capable of fixing it and have time for it. I see it on my own example, as there were some parts of the stack I never really considered digging into to fix stuff by myself, and when I finally tried, turned out there was no reason to keep myself restrained. It's just a friendly reminder that you can often fix such stuff by yourself and it might be not as hard as it seems.
Well, at least when ignoring the UI/UX mention that has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion here (color correction is required in many fields, but UI and UX aren't really those ones).
The author seems to be technical enough to make a nice analysis of what's done and what needs to be done. I suspect he might be able to provide this particular fix himself - or, if he isn't, then he might be able to contribute by providing a well-detailed feature request for others to implement (with that even I might be able to go and fix it, while without it I surely won't, as I lack the knowledge, hardware and in fact even awareness of this problem; only reading this post put some light on it for me).
Some people don't do the mental switch between "I'll wait for fix" and "I'll fix it" if they're not used to it, even if they are perfectly capable of fixing it and have time for it. I see it on my own example, as there were some parts of the stack I never really considered digging into to fix stuff by myself, and when I finally tried, turned out there was no reason to keep myself restrained. It's just a friendly reminder that you can often fix such stuff by yourself and it might be not as hard as it seems.