I found an application this morning which has truly helped me. I'd been going batty since switching from my old G4 Powerbook to a relatively-cheap 13" Macbook (not the pro model).
The screen, while I can eventually get over the glossiness, just had a washed-out pale look to it, even when the brightness was dimmed down. The curves were all wrong. I hated it. No amount of tipping the screen back and forth or running Apple's calibration tool could help. I was beginning to be really bummed out.... Along comes this simple shareware: SuperCal. It has a "wizard" which walks you through about 12 steps to determine the proper response curve for your screen. I don't know if this is any way to MATCH colors for printing and whatnot, but I have to say - it's managed to give me a screen I am happy to use now. It's almost as good as what I had on the Powerbook (although the Macbook screen still has a huge variance in how it looks if you look at it from overhead vs. "underneath" such as when the screen is tipped way back). Highly recommended for those of you using a Mac who wonder if they have it set anywhere near correctly. "Works for me!" http://www.bergdesign.com/supercal/ -Charles -- Charles Robinson - [EMAIL PROTECTED] Minneapolis, MN http://charles.robinsontwins.org -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow the directions.

