Jostein,

I've never heard about that type of configuration, but in my experience of talking with the X-Rite support, - they are clueless about how their packages are sold. (I was trying to figure out the difference between two different UPC numbers reported by different authorized resellers. Only after I bought one, I found out that their units are boxed in two boxes, and the inner and the outer ones have different UPCs. They had no clue.)

Now, I don't know the answer to you question, but if it doesn't work, and you want to experiment you might want to try the 3rd-party free software that is likely to support your hardware. Argyll CMS http://www.argyllcms.com and a frontend for it DisplayCal.
I learned about it in December from Zos:
http://pdml.net/pipermail/pdml_pdml.net/2014-December/389791.html
In the same thread Ralf mentioned using Colormunki with BasicColor.

HTH,

Igor



Jostein Oksne Mon, 16 Feb 2015 05:53:57 -0800 wrote:


Does anyone in here have a laptop with integrated colour calibration tool?

I got myself a refurbished Lenovo W540 last summer, with a built-in sensor from Pantone/X-Rite, and the calibration software that goes with it. Works quite nicely for the built-in screen. When I connect external screens, the software eagerly suggest I calibrate them too.


I do have a ColorMunki, so I contacted X-Rite to ask if I could use the Munki with the Pantone software that comes with the Lenovo. The European Support-guy insisted that he knew nothing about the "Lenova software", which is kinda surprising since it is made by X-Rite.


But anyway... If anyone has experience from a similar situation, I'd be very grateful for any info on how well/bad things work together.


Cheers,

Jostein

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