Calibration

Do you calibrate your monitors?

Other urls found in this thread:

lagom.nl/lcd-test/?
hughski.com/index.html
github.com/hughski/colorhug2-hardware
twitter.com/NSFWRedditVideo

>Test tells me to adjust gamma until dots disappear
>dots are clearly visible at every single setting

>@58214028*
You haven't used a calibrated monitor side by side an uncalibrated one haven't you?

*tripfags aren't worth direct linking

Planning to buy one for £85-£90 on my dell u2414h

I don't get it, do manufacturers not have this tool? Did they not calibrate it already?
[spoiler]Do monitor manufacturers make money off colorimeters too?[/spoiler]

Dell factory calibrates their montiors, not sure how but its not good as calibrating it yourself with colorimeters

Nice placebo faggot, lagom.nl/lcd-test/? this website is all you need

I wish I could just rent these for a day instead of buying one

hi mr poor, why not buy yourself one like a good goy?

lol just seems like a waste of money for something that i'd use maybe once every couple of years

>Do you calibrate your monitors?
I'm not an idiot, of course I do. More importantly, what do you calibrate your monitors to?

>BT.1886 or GTFO

How many hours a year do you stare at your monitor screen goy?

1. You can't calibrate by eye, don't even try
2. Disable your browser's scaling

>I don't get it, do manufacturers not have this tool? Did they not calibrate it already?

1. Unless you're spending at least $1000 on your display, don't expect the time to calibrate to be worth their production time. They don't give a shit about the color accuracy for end user crap like the generic $200 TN panels most people on Sup Forums are using

2. Mid-range displays, especially those oriented towards “prosumers”, are generally pre-calibrated, but usually not very well. (e.g. my LG was calibrated to gamma 2.2, but that's a pretty worthless curve to calibrate to)

3. High-end displays, those actually oriented towards professionals, either come with tools like these out of the box or even integrated into the panel themselves (e.g. Eizo, Sony, LaCie)

>browser calibration

No. They are shitty TN LCDs anyway, I doubt there's much you can do.
Grayest blacks you can imagine.

>I wish I could just rent these for a day instead of buying one
If you're really that much of a destitute nigger, you can

1. Buy colorimeter
2. Use to calibrate
3. Return within the 14-day return period

It's not like using a colorimeter damages the colorimeter or is really noticeable in any way.

But you can also actually rent higher-end colorimeters (i.e. stuff you wouldn't just go ahead and order as a consumer) as well, although I don't know where you'd go looking (pro A/V shops maybe?)

>No. They are shitty TN LCDs anyway, I doubt there's much you can do.
Fallacy. A well-calibrated TN is orders of magnitude better than an uncalibrated TN. Sure, your off-angle colors will still be distorted, but the overall picture will be significantly improved.

t. used to own an IPS and TN dual-monitor setup. After calibration, the TN and IPS panels looked basically identical (except for off-center distortion effects on the TN panel). It's a gigantic step up from every display basically looking completely different

If you can't afford one of those you don't need it. should be good enough for you.

nope I use mine on 20% brightness to save buckaroo

yes, I got mine because they're hardware calibratable to internal luts with the i1 I already had

Even if you don't do any professional design work, calibrating your monitor can improve your computing experience; e.g.

1. natural white tone makes pictures/movies etc. actually look realistic for a change
2. good gamma curve will prevent stuff like near-black or near-white details from being crushed or obscured
3. channel neutrality will remove unnatural tints

Sites like that will, at best, allow you to make sure your mid-point gamma is about 2.2; but that's it. It won't fix the shape of your curves, it won't fix your white point, it won't fix color tints and inconsistency between displays, it won't fix your gamut (which causes oversaturation/undersaturation), and so on.

OP isn't a tripfag and what the fuck are you doing with the @ in there?

I use the integrated tool in my Eizo CG246.
It just werks.

Why the fuck did you quote both the first and second posts?

Best way to calibrate my monitor without spend 90$?

Calibrate your eyes instead

get a ColorHUG

hughski.com/index.html

The original one is like, what, $40-$50?

No thanks

> You understand there are no Microsoft Windows or Apple OS X native drivers included with this product. You can use the Linux LiveCD sent with the device on any modern PC. The display.icc file can then be saved and used with Linux, Mac or Windows.

pure trash

Go to a photo or A/V shop, ask them if they could rent you a colorimeter.

Nice pepe.

It's open source hardware, not their fault proprietary trash operating systems can't ship drivers for it

It's not like people who use Windows expect driver compatibility anyway.

>not the manufacturers fault they are too lazy and incompitant to provide driver support for the most popular desktop operating systems

>open source hardware
>£85

Kill yourself, shit stain.

Monitors are calibrated in factory faggots.

you are so ignorant

github.com/hughski/colorhug2-hardware
Go ahead and build your own then.

It looks like too much of work for litle gains and not worth it. Compared to a website.

Thanks for your valuable contribution

Yes

np.
:)

This dude, use a new boxcutter blade to open it up, then a very thin sliver of clear packing tape cut to the length of the tape already on the box.

And just tell them you didn't need it because you googled it lol

And their face when you do it at best buy with 500 worth of shit for the keks

>And just tell them you didn't need it because you googled it lol
Why tell them anything at all? Here in Germany you can just return shit for no reason at all, within 14 days

Very good!
Usually they ask if there's anything wrong with it. I read they can charge restocking fees so fuck that noise.

I got a 4k HD 24" LG recently.. will I need to calibrate a 4k screen or should I purchase a cali hardware.

Yes.
CRT and S-PVA are both calibrated using displaycal.

Because calibration only lasts about a month or two. Backlight color drifts pretty hard.

he doesnt live in a country where you can return an item within 15 days for no reason at all