1. Idk how to read curves, but this is good for starting me to learn about them. just looked at it. so you're saying no mater how much dev you have because iodide releases restrainers it will never be able to fully develop a roll of film mostly made of iodide?
Reading the curves by themselves is rather simple. The horizontal x-axis denotes exposure in some logarithmic scale, and the vertical y-axis denotes density in a linear scale. Density itself (as it is used for photographic film) denotes how much light is absorbed by a somewhat translucent medium. Density itself is a logarithmic measure, so exposure/density plots can be seen as loglog plots. Since we know, how silver halide responds to light exposure and development, we are not at all surprised to see monotonously rising graphs in these charts: higher exposure yields higher density.
The photographic material itself brings with it some relation between exposure and developability of grains, and then the developer has properties of its own. A developer may be more or less restrained by byproducts of development, it may become more active with development. It may run out of steam as it is used up during development. All of this will together set the final result of this H&D curve as it is called.
If you then look at the chemical reaction of development, you will see a competition for silver: while the developer would love to reduce it to metallic silver, the iodide likes its silver ion quite a lot. You will have to argue with the iodide ion to let go of that silver ion. "Argue" means "bring in a powerful development agent". However, that "powerful development" agent may end up developing silver halide grains that were not even exposed, so you may end up with the choice between "partially developed image" or "all grains were fully developed", and neither are good for image making.
I don't know the exact numbers, but fact is, that modern Silver Bromoiodide film emulsions contain no more than a few % iodide.
2. blue sensitve? does this mean that it is not red and green sensitive? also bromide being UV sensitive + visible light sensitive? I'm having toruble getting this second part would you mind elaborating?
@koraks told you already more than I know about direct light sensitivity of silver halides, allow me therefore to skip that part and move right into sensitizing dyes. These are "crazy dyes" (look at their molecular structure in patents to know what I mean), which stick to silver halide quite well, so they will be found on the surface of silver halide grains. These dyes will absorb certain light wavelengths and somehow pass that energy on to the silver halide crystal. Please don't ask me how that works, since I am not a chemist, but these sensitizing dyes do work, and have worked for more than a century.
Looking at
@koraks ' graphs, it may be easier to imagine a dye absorbing green or blue wavelength and kicking that silver halide grain into action, and indeed blue and green sensitization existed long before red sensitization became a thing (look for orthochromatic vs. panchromatic film). From what I have been told the sensitizing dyes needed to render silver halide IR sensitive are truly bizarre, and this may be the reason why even IR films were quite insensitive in the IR range of wavelengths.
Sensitizing dyes do imbue spectral sensitivity in the range we want, but at the cost of quite some loss of sensitivity, i.e. you'd need many more red photons to convince red sensitizing dye to kick silver halide into action, than you'd need UV photons to kick silver halide into action by itself. This means: while these 15-20% sensitivity of Silver Iodide to blue light looks lame, it may still be way better than Silver Bromide with blue sensitizing dye.