Hello Lee, "> The i1 just reports a list of patches. It is up to the software to decide which way the strip was read in." It can be either way. The i1Pro 2 can automatically provide data in the proper order if configured for it by the program, either by using a predefined color lists or by using the new ruler input. Data can also be ordered in the software, but that requires either a predefined color list or a "start/end of line" marker (bar code). Danny Pascale www.babelcolor.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Lee Badham" <lee.b@bodoni.co.uk> To: "Michael Eddington" <meddington38@gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2013 10:22 AM Subject: Re: Thank you X-Rite!
Hi,
The i1 just reports a list of patches. It is up to the software to decide which way the strip was read in.
Lee
On 12 Jun 2013, at 15:15, Michael Eddington wrote:
Was the ability to read in either direction tied to the reference file? Seem to me that capability came and went when measuring strips of different origins.
Mike
On Jun 12, 2013, at 10:05 AM, Andrew Rodney <andrew@digitaldog.net> wrote:
On Jun 12, 2013, at 12:50 AM, Peter Miles wrote:
Half way through reading the fifth set of patches I got so annoyed at how slow all this hand scanning was going that I deliberately read the next strip of patches in the WRONG direction! "Take that!" I thought. To my utter delight i1Profiler took it in it's stride and put the measurements in the right way around. Taking advantage this newly discovered ability of i1Profiler's ability to read patch strips in either direction speed things up from there.
Moving in dual directions (left to right or right to left) was something the original i1Pro did as well. Nothing new here.
Andrew Rodney http://www.digitaldog.net/ _______________________________________________