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Monitor Calibration Odd Behavior
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Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorI had to recalibrate my monitor with the new build and had to purchase a calibrator for W7. Plugged in the Spyder and this is what popped up! Think I should return it?
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post. aka Cheryl
Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorInteresting. It's either late for Halloween or early for April Fool's Day, Cheryl!
HP Envy with 2.9/4.4 ghz i7-10700 and 16 gig of RAM running Windows 11 Pro
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorEverything's going touch these days...
Just be sure to follow what it says or your calibration may be off.
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd Behavior
Well, it spelled something out about a Mayan cliff....didn't catch it all. aka Cheryl
Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorI'm at a loss for words. Just plain foundumbded.
Be yourself; everyone else is taken.
Asus X570-E motherboard; AMD Ryzen 9 3900X 3.8 GHz; 64GB DDR4; GeForce RTX 2060 6GB; 1TB Samsung 970 Pro M.2 SSD
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorCheryl, could your new computer be haunted?
I also need to calibrate my monitors, they are quite different. I have on ancient Spyder2 and am reluctant to buy a new one. I did get it actually to work on my Win 7 64-bit laptop and got a good match with the external monitor. But when I try it on the new computer under Win 8,it works for one monitor, but won't let me do the second monitor. I have to play around with it some more before I break down and by a more up to date calibrator. But seeing your result, I'm not sure I will buy another Spyder A) i7-3930K 3.2GHz (3.8GHz Turbo), 32GB DDR3-1600, SSD 256GB, 2x1TB+2x2TB Seagate Barracuda (72krpm), Geforce GTX 550 Ti (1GB), Win10 Pro 64-bit
B) Sony Vaio i7-3632QM,12gb DDR3-1333MHz, GeForce® GT 640M LE (2GB), 750GB (7200rpm), Win10 Pro64-bit
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorGerlinde, I tried to use my old Monaco X-rite on the W7 machine. Found a work around, but when I tried to manually install the driver got the dreaded blue screen. Gave up and bought the Spyder Pro 4.
After having a monitor calibrated it is hard to work on an uncalibrated one. Guess you don't miss something you never used until you use it. I am happy with the Spyder, but my monitor doesn't have the option to set kelvin point so I had to try different ambient room light to get a good target. Hopefully I did it correctly. aka Cheryl
Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorThe easiest way to find out, Cheryl, print a photo and see if it is pretty close to what you see on your monitor. Let Photoshop manage the colors and turn off color management in your printer. You also have to choose the same paper profile that you are printing on for an accurate preview. But you probably know all that already A) i7-3930K 3.2GHz (3.8GHz Turbo), 32GB DDR3-1600, SSD 256GB, 2x1TB+2x2TB Seagate Barracuda (72krpm), Geforce GTX 550 Ti (1GB), Win10 Pro 64-bit
B) Sony Vaio i7-3632QM,12gb DDR3-1333MHz, GeForce® GT 640M LE (2GB), 750GB (7200rpm), Win10 Pro64-bit
Re: Monitor Calibration Odd BehaviorThanks Gerlinde, I did know and I didn't know at the same time. Things have been eluding me lately. I gave up a long time ago to let PS manage the colors. I let the printer manage. But, good idea on a test print. I do have a few photos I am working on now that will get sent out to print at Walgreeens. Thanks for the refresher!
aka Cheryl
Intel i7 3770, Windows 7 Pro w/SP1, 64 bit, Intel 520 Series SSD, 32G RAM, 2 – 2T RAID, (1T external), GTX 550 Ti graphics
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