No ... looking good on your screen doesn't mean it will look good on
another screen.  There are several ways to calibrate a monitor.
Probably the simplest (and least effective, but better than nothing) is
the program that comes with Photoshop, Adobe Gamma.

Another is ColorVision by Pantone.  This system uses a "spyder" that's
placed on the screen to read the colors and calibrates the monitor based
on some of your presets.  A very good system for the money, imo.

There are other lesser or more expensive systems available ...

shel

Anders Hultman wrote:

> >but unless
> >the monitors are calibrated to be the same as one
> >another, or at least close, the honest answer is
> >that you can't, imo.
>
> Really? But how do people do this, generally?
> Just make it look good on their own screen and hope for the best?
>

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