Yes, intel has color correction on their settings, but they suck big
time. People at ati forums are all complaining that they don't have
that feature either. If you don't know what I'm talking about, I
strongly advise you to go to a nvidia computer and fiddle with that
setting. Even my geforce 2 mx had digital vibrance. If not port such
feature, at least there should be a way to increase the color
correction range steps, as the changes are too harsh and just look
cheap.

On Jul 26, 9:09 am, DragonriderX <[email protected]> wrote:
> I had a look and all i could find in the driver files (inf wise) was
> nothing put open GL settings etc. etc. but if i am not mistaken the
> control panel for intel gma had a colour section which you can change
> the colour settings to your liking
>
> On Jul 26, 3:28 pm, Espionage724 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hmm, idk tooo much about color correction and that, but perhaps if
> > there was a file in the driver files that controlled color correction,
> > maybe it can be switched with another one?
>
> > On Sun, Jul 25, 2010 at 9:41 PM, tribaljet <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > After using a few different intel graphics solutions, I noticed how
> > > the newer the chipset was, the richer the feature set was. Still, on
> > > the software side there weren't that many changes.
> > > What I'm wondering, is if there is any way to change color correction
> > > with smoother steps, as nvidia does with its digital vibrance setting.
> > > What it does, in plain terms, is change the color saturation in a way
> > > that it doesn't burn colors until the setting is cranked all the way
> > > up. So, can this be ported somehow in a future driver release? Or is
> > > there any quality software that enables the user to do it?
>
> > > --
> > > 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS
>
> > --
> > Acer TravelMate 2480
> > GFX: GMA950   CPU: Intel Celeron M 420 @ 1.6Ghz   RAM: 2GB DDR2 333Mhz
> >   HDD: Samsung 120GB 5400RPM SATA
>
>

-- 
9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS

Reply via email to