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p.1 #9 · Best / Most User Friendly Calibration Software | |
If ease wins over cost, have a look at some of the displays with hardware look-up-tables: NEC LCDxx90 series, Eizo. You simply specify your calibration targets (e.g. 6500k, gamma 2.2, luminance ~120cd/m) and the display talks to the software automatically to hit your chosen values. You set it, affix the sensor, and press go. This is in contrast to the systems that take steps that ask you to measure with the sensor, then raise/lower the settings manually via the on-screen control panel (brightness, contrast) before going through the calibration routine. This accomplishes both of your "best" and "user-friendly" goals in terms of quality and very little interaction.
That said, monitor calibration isn't dummy proof. While the software can suggest calibration targets for you -- even going so far as offering presets for common ones, the key is to understand what is best for your conditions as well as having a loose understanding of the role of each aim point. I think this is important regardless of what software/hardware combo you choose. For photographers, you can't really go wrong with 6500k, gamma 2.2 and a luminance around 120 cd/m (±20 depending on the brightness of your working area).
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