On Wednesday 08 September 2004 03:41, Hal V. Engel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>That is what I had in mind. I have Scribus 1.2 installed (latest
>version) and it does appear to be color savvy but I just started
>looking at it today and it took me a while to figure out how to
>get a photo into it.
Hal V. Engel wrote:
to being affordable if there was software available. Argyll does not
appear to be supported any more. But it may contain some basic
building blocks that can be leveraged to extend Linux color management
capabilities.
Argyll continues to be supported and developed, but relea
Am 07.09.04, 19:40 -0700 schrieb Hal V. Engel:
> That is what I had in mind. I have Scribus 1.2 installed (latest
> version) and it does appear to be color savvy but I just started
> looking at it today and it took me a while to figure out how to
> get a photo into it. It is also not real stable
On Tuesday 07 September 2004 15:13, Gerhard Fuernkranz wrote:
> Hal V. Engel schrieb:
>
> >The lprof profile I generated does look to be OK when I look at the
> >results using qtmeasurementtool. Now all I need is tools that will
> >use it in Linux.
> >
> There are or course tifficc and jpegicc.
On Tuesday 07 September 2004 14:33, Gerhard Fuernkranz wrote:
> Stefan DÃhla schrieb:
>
> >b.t.w.: does someone know about spectrophotometers or colorimeters
> >that have a complete interfacing description (maybe even source
code)?
> >
> For instance X-Rite DTP41 and DTP51, or GretagMacbeth
> Sp
Hal V. Engel schrieb:
The lprof profile I generated does look to be OK when I look at the
results using qtmeasurementtool. Now all I need is tools that will
use it in Linux.
There are or course tifficc and jpegicc. But I guess you're actually
looking for color management savvy *graphics applica
On Tuesday 07 September 2004 12:53, Stefan Döhla wrote:
snip
> > I think using Windows based profilers are fine if you are profiling
> > scanners, cameras and printers for Linux as long as you do all of
the
> > image IO in Linux using the same drivers and setting that you will
be
> > using norma
Stefan Döhla schrieb:
b.t.w.: does someone know about spectrophotometers or colorimeters
that have a complete interfacing description (maybe even source code)?
For instance X-Rite DTP41 and DTP51, or GretagMacbeth
Spectrolino/Spectroscan. Code examples see Argyll source code.
Avantes also provide
Hi Hal, hi list,
> In addition for
> monitors this package does only calibration, has no interface for a
> spectrometer or any way to input spectrometer data and does not
> generate a monitor profile. And then in Windows I don't even know
> what it does with the data that was generated during
On Monday 06 September 2004 16:39, gerard klaver wrote:
snip
> I use wine to install and startup the the binary from
> lcms_profiler_beta_3.exe (no source)
>
>
> For lprof, (is not supported anymore, is removed from the lcms site)
> on the next link, a source package can be found.
>
> http://w
On Tuesday 07 September 2004 02:09, gerard klaver wrote:
snip
>
> On the list there was also a email from Stefan Döhla about the tool:
>
> you can use Graem Gill's iccdump:
> # iccdump -t vcgt gamma_1_0.icc
>
> to detect if your profile contains a vcgt tag, not tested yet by
myself.
>
>
> --
Thanks.
Gamma tables seems to be all. I simply forgot to multiply by 2 for
16-bit precission of the gamma curves. After changing this my information
hole is closed :)
regards
Kai-Uwe
Am 06.09.04, 17:46 +0200 schrieb Stefan Döhla:
> > does someone know more about the vcgt tag.
>
> Apple does.
>
> does someone know more about the vcgt tag.
Apple does.
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/GraphicsImaging/Reference/ColorSync_Manager/colorsync_mgr_ref/constant_66.html
Stefan
--
Stefan Döhla Regionales Rechenzentrum Erlangen
Martensstr. 1 91058 Erlangen
--
> Are there tools to check if a display profile contains a vcgt-tag and
> does lcms_profiler_beta_3.exe (newer version) or lprof package put a
> vcgt-tag in the display profile?
you can use Graem Gill's iccdump:
# iccdump -t vcgt gamma_1_0.icc
you can build it for Win32 and UNIXes.
b.t.w.: xcali
On Mon, 2004-09-06 at 10:57, Kai-Uwe Behrmann wrote:
> Hi,
>
> does someone know more about the vcgt tag. The gamma tables are easy to
> understand. But there are some more information inside, which I dont know
> how to interprete.
>
> regards
> Kai-Uwe
Are there tools to check if a display prof
Hi,
does someone know more about the vcgt tag. The gamma tables are easy to
understand. But there are some more information inside, which I dont know
how to interprete.
regards
Kai-Uwe
Am 01.09.04, 16:08 +0200 schrieb Stefan Doehla:
> Hi list,
>
> I've created a tool which will calibrate your
You are correct about the G450 in Windows. In Windows changes to gamma
in the driver affect both monitors and the gamma dialog does not have
the ability to specify which display is being adjusted. In Linux only
monitor 0 is affected even though the Kgamma dialog lets the user
select different
Hi Hal,
> All of these will change the primary display when S 0 is used and will
> do nothing when S 1 is used. Values other than 0 and 1 return an
> error message from the xserver. I am running XFree86 4.3.99 with the
> 2.6.5 kernel and KDE 3.3. So is it me or does everyone have this same
> p
This is a big step forward. Thanks for your good work.
In the past I have played around with the gamma settings on my Linux
box and have found that I can not set the gamma on my second monitor
with xgamma or with any of the GUI gamma tools available (Kgamma and
others). I have tried S 0 and
You might consider using a license which is compatible with the X11
license and the license used by LCMS.
Why should color-managed X11 be less free than X11 itself?
Bob
On Wed, 1 Sep 2004, Stefan Doehla wrote:
Hi list,
I've created a tool which will calibrate your monitors by using the
'vcgt'-tag
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