On Aug 22, 2007, at 10:39 AM, Tom C wrote:

> The more and more I think about it, the more it becomes apparent that
> regardless of how things look on my monitor I can be almost  
> guaranteed it
> won't look the same on someone else's, regardless of calibration, etc.
>
> If contrast is adjustable, doesn't this compensate for the contrast  
> the
> monitor is spec'd to have?

That depends upon the range of adjustability provided by the contrast  
adjustment control, and how well the calibration for color fidelity  
can be managed given a sensible contrast and brightness setting.

The point of a quality monitor display is that it can display the  
range of tones and colors accurately to be used as a reference for  
doing photographic image processing: making web and print versions of  
photographs for display and distribution. The fact that other  
monitors might have difficulty displaying what your reference display  
renders with good fidelity isn't relevant. What's relevant is that  
such a monitor allows you to edit and view your work with consistency  
and quality.

Godfrey

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