Andrew, You said: "> Could one not build or edit a few display profiles .." Yes, what you describe is a simple method of verifying that the peripherals are indeed associated with the separate profiles shown in the Color management control panel. By checking the panel and making your test, they should be quite knowledgeable about the capabilities of their display system. Note: In my case, by "before installing it" I was not clear enough. I meant before purchasing and putting hands on the equipment (since the information is hard/imposible to find in specifications). Danny www.babelcolor.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Rodney" <andrew@digitaldog.net> To: "'colorsync-users?lists.apple.com' List" <colorsync-users@lists.apple.com> Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2014 3:02 PM Subject: Re: Off topic....dual monitors, Intel HD Graphics 4000 and Win 7
On Mar 19, 2014, at 12:59 PM, dpascale <dpascale@babelcolor.com> wrote:
I could not find a simple direct anwer before installing it!
Could one not build or edit a few display profiles with an obvious color cast, then see that each display reflects the profile associated with the profile? Don't know being a Mac guy, dual display's always seemed to be supported. If Indeed each display is accessing it's own profile, then it seems the fix is to adjust the white point calibration such that the two dissimilar systems produce the same color appearance. Not sure how well Spyder Pro allows for precise setting of White Point.
Andrew Rodney http://www.digitaldog.net/ _______________________________________________