I know nothing really about your problem, but I do know a little bit about computers.

When you changed monitors did you change screen resolution? This will be (in Windows) 
in the control panel. The common screen resolutions are:  640X480 (not many people use 
that anymore, that was old monitors), 800X600 (what I use on mine), and 1024x768 (many 
newer large montiors use this). This could affect how much you see on the screen which 
might make it not correlate with a printer.

There are also different color settings for each of these resolutions. In my Windows 
layout I have a little monitor in my task bar, it lets me reset screen resolution (as 
I said you can also find this in the control panel of Windows). I can specifiy Color, 
High Color, and True Color at each of the screen resolutions. I.E. 800X600 Color, 
800x600 High Color, 800X600 True Color. This affects how color bits are set. 

I use True Color. Now it is possible (not saying this is the solution), that you need 
to reset your montior settings using the operating system software that you have 
(Windows or Linux) to True Color. If that doesn't work then try High Color. And it is 
possible that if that doesn't work you need to reset it in Photoshop or whatever you 
are using. Usually that will be a menu selection on the extreme left side. Monitor 
settings. You can play with gamma settings too, but first check out the Color settings 
on your new monitor and on the correlating software that you are using, such as 
Photoshop.

Hmmm, the title has changed, have I got the right thread?

Doe aka Marnie  If not, Nevermind. (Roseanna Danna voice)

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