Hi gang, I just got myself a GretagMacbeth Eye-One Display 1, but my question can also probably be answered by those who use other devices like Spyder.
I've done a calibration exercise on my notebook LCD, and after calibration (with iMatch v3), the new ICC profile was applied, and the difference I saw was ... nothing ... or at least, not significant enough to tell.
It could mean a few things ... my notebook LCD was pretty spot-on (debatable, it's about 1.5 years old), my eyes can't tell, the calibration didn't work, or I did it wrong. BTW, I used the "simple" method.
For those of you who did calibration, or had it done for them (eg. by oeyvind), did you see a marked difference ? What was the difference ? Whites whiter, greens greener, reds redder, blues bluer ?
I've got a 17" monitor on my desktop at home which I haven't calibrated yet, but thought I'd ask first. Most, if not all, online reviews do not seem to state how color accuracy was derived at (unless my comprehension of the English language is down the drain as well, and I didn't pick it up :sweatsm: )
I've done a calibration exercise on my notebook LCD, and after calibration (with iMatch v3), the new ICC profile was applied, and the difference I saw was ... nothing ... or at least, not significant enough to tell.
It could mean a few things ... my notebook LCD was pretty spot-on (debatable, it's about 1.5 years old), my eyes can't tell, the calibration didn't work, or I did it wrong. BTW, I used the "simple" method.
For those of you who did calibration, or had it done for them (eg. by oeyvind), did you see a marked difference ? What was the difference ? Whites whiter, greens greener, reds redder, blues bluer ?
I've got a 17" monitor on my desktop at home which I haven't calibrated yet, but thought I'd ask first. Most, if not all, online reviews do not seem to state how color accuracy was derived at (unless my comprehension of the English language is down the drain as well, and I didn't pick it up :sweatsm: )