o kur cia neatitikimas su manim ? :) Algis wrote: > beje tam pačiam colorwiki, tam pačiam puslapyje... > Trim klausimais toliau... ;))) > > How do I calibrate and profile my monitor? > > There are a couple of different methods to calibrate and profile your > monitor: > > 1. Software only. Apple's ColorSync Default Calibrator and Adobe > Gamut control panels can both be used to profile and calibrate your > monitor "by eye". The software walks you through several steps to set > your monitor's gamma and white points, and allows you to select your > monitor from a predefined list. > 2. Software and Hardware. Using a colorimeter or spectrophotometer > (instruments which measure color output) in conjunction with software > will also calibrate and profile the monitor. The hardware is "stuck" > right to the surface of the screen and reads multiple color patches. > > > http://www.colorwiki.com/wiki/Monitor_Calibration_FAQ#How_do_I_calibrate_and_profile_my_monitor.3F > > > > Sakirs wrote: >> na ka, tiek jau to. Nematu tikslo toliau diskutuoti. :) >> >> Algis wrote: >>> Pas TranZOO ant sandėliuko parašyta bybys, nors jis ten malkas laiko ;) >>> O šiaip tekstulis čia liko nuo CRT laikų nepakeistas... >>> >>> Sakirs wrote: >>>> istrauka is www.colorwiki.com >>>> >>>> Monitor Calibration and Profiling: What's the Difference? >>>> >>>> To calibrate is to change the behavior of a monitor (or printer or >>>> scanner) to return it to a standard. Periodic calibration will >>>> maintain the monitor so that the way it produces color will stay >>>> consistent over time. >>>> To Profile is to analyze the monitor to see how it produces its >>>> color. With aprofile you can tell other applications (like >>>> Photoshop, for instance) how to convert color settings so the image >>>> looks right on screen. >>>> In practice, most monitor calibration and profiling software >>>> performs both of these tasks at once and you may not notice when it >>>> moves from one task to another.