[quote]it should help every colour look more natural. thats the whole point of calibration :)
thanks...I was just worried that it was meant mainly for professional photography and wouldn't do much for PC gaming since gaming does not have as much accurate color reproduction
anyone ever calibrated their LCD with the SpectraView software and EyeOne Display 2 sensor?...is it complicated for beginners?...I hear that the 2490WUXi allows you to calibrate the internal LUT table of the monitor itself vs the normal video card LUT (I'm not sure what it all really means but it is apparently much better)
It helps gaming too. :)
Its not complicated for beginners. There are presets you can use for this. Best results would come when you learn the program.
By calibrating the screen itself, you are ensured that the calibration sticks in all situations. In addition, there is no loss of colors and the steppings between each shade is smoother. It also reduces any chance of banding this way.
You can also make as many calibrations as you wish and load them directly into the screen via spectraview. It will also alter the brightness settings etc. according to your choices upon each calibration automatically.
I love this tool.
I would start by entering the advanced menu on the screen. To get there, you need to turn off monitor, hold the input button in while you power it on. Afterwards, you can press menu and the advanced menu will appear.
In tag 7, you can turn overdrive on and off. By default its off.
I'll give you a starting point to calibrate it for gaming (through spectraview) and you can go from there if you wish. Its a bit more advanced then just using the presets. :)
Plug in the calibrator.
Open Spectraview.
Next to target settings, choose edit the target settings.
Put white point on D65. Gamma = 2.2, Intensity 120, contrast ratio= default. Choose ok.
Save the target by pressing disk icon.
Enter tools ->monitor settings.
Tag white background and check if white is even. Don't mind if white seems grey as long as its even. Toggle "use colorcomp" and set it on level 5. Look at white and check if its more even then. Go down step by step to one and choose your preferred white eveness.
If it looks good with colorcomp off, then don't use it.
Choose edit -> preferences.
Tab 1: Average low luminance measurements = on (for best black level seperation
Tab 2: 32 steps is sufficiant, calibration priority: maximize contrast, extended luminance stab. time=on
Tab 3: Tag all and choose automatic
Tab 4: deselect automatically load settings on target change and confirm...
Tab 5: Do not lock, and tag use auto luminace.
Press ok and press calibrate