...I don't really agree with any of them as I see this - a subtle wave of green discolouration blowing out as a wave to the right side of the of the 1.
I was just about to post the same thing! Oddly enough, I saw this
before I noticed the 1, and is probably the reason I ended up doing so.
My next reaction was to quote the post so I could see the BBCode because I thought to myself "This argument seems dumb and weird. Maybe there's more going on here, though, things that might actually be interesting. Time to look a little deeper."
Then "Okay, nothing there. People are saying there's 300 zeroes (obviously not, but whatever) but is that even true? Worthwhile to do some basic fact-checking before getting involved."
And I learned it's not a square, data-wise! 25x12. I thought that was interesting. Other than that, there is a '1' at [6,6] and the rest of the grid is zeroes.
So, ultimately, I believe that everyone in the conversation is kinda weird. Why
focus at all? The task is to describe something, presumably they want to do so accurately.
"It's a 25x12 grid of digits, with a '1' at [6,6] and 0s in every other position, with no boundary markers for the cells and an interesting ocular effect creating a visual illusion of a cone extending encompassing the right side of the grid, radiating from the 1."
That should cover both the technical parts of the description, as well as "focusing" on the interesting parts - the things that arise from the topic being discussed.
Arguing that the '1' is/isn't important/is less important than the zeros/is not important is stupid - nothing in the image is important, except to the extent that it plays a role in the definition the people have to give! And as far as defining features go, everyone seems to be "focusing", when all the focusing does is lead them to an incomplete picture and a weird argument full of nonsensical and baseless statements. Even Bob seems to fall for this sort of thing, saying things like "The zeros are clearly more important to the overall picture." What does that even
mean? Who knows! Not these guys, that's for sure.
I guess if I "focused" on anything, it more has to do with the shape of the data on the whole, the reason the question is being asked, and then what of interest can I pull out of this.