In a message dated 3/13/2005 7:28:43 AM Pacific Standard Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
HAR! But, Bill, it does a much better job deleting your bank account.

Adobe Gamma is about like plain ground glass. The more one fiddles with it 
the 
better your eye adjusts to the screen. Of course that is just the opposite of 
what one wants. If one stops at the first match, they are pretty close. If 
not 
sure go away from the computer for awhile and recheck it later. It will 
probaby 
be within one click. Sit there staring at the screen, and 4-5 clicks to 
either 
side start looking the same. The human eye is very adaptable.

For anyone who may be interested, I do not calibrate my monitor. I calibrate 
my 
video card. To do that I load the appropriate monitor profile, set the 
monitor 
to base values for that profile plus max contrast, and minimum brightness. 
Then 
I load Adobe Gamma, but do not use its adjustors. Instead I use the video 
card 
software to adust the screen to standard PC gamma (I use 2.2 and turn up the 
monitor brightness (I have noted what point on the scale equals 1.8 gamma) 
when 
I want to view an Apple image). Then I save the settings as a custom video 
card 
profile. With this proceedure the monitor image seems to be much more stable 
than with the usually suggested method.

graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
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Cool. I'll see if I can do that. (If I can figure it out.) Not sure where my 
monitor profile is, but presumably on my computer. My feeling is that Adobe 
Gamma has changed my monitor profile.

Marnie 

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