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And the other thing that always weirds me out about these kind of tools, is how useless any particular color scheme is without context. There's no color visible to the human eye that doesn't have the right setting. Saying these 3, 5, or 15 colors "look great" together, doesn't really mean anything.
I guess that's part of what bothers me about these things: they reduce the *apparent* need for a solid grasp of color theory. But they don't *remove* the need.
However, taking off the artist cap and putting on the web-developer cap: the app is rad. I bet it was a lot of fun to develop and is a truly inspired shot in the dark at social networking. "Let's make color palettes a social thing" Fucking brilliant.
What kuler does is enables the less design-y people to look at color pre-designed themes and potentially apply them in the website, application and or other aspects of design they are currently facing. I feel kuler also helps in the inspiration aspect by providing tools to help designers quickly create the theme they want and then save it as an ASE file (Adobe Swatch Exchange) which they can then saved for future use; both on and offline.
I still get weirded out by seeing people say, "those colors (5 or so) look AWESOME!"... when used correctly, I think you can put any 5 colors together and make something pleasing. And whether or not those colors are appropriate to the setting have a lot to do with context. Context isn't something that can be programmed into a tool like this, though the image feature *does* help with that a lot.