| Author | Thread | 
		
			|  | 03/05/2003 04:01:16 PM · #1 | 
		| | I'm getting a few comments that lead me to believe that my image may not be showing up on eveyone's computer the same.  Someone said my image had a rainbow effect.  This is strange to me because it is (to the best of my knowlege) a greyscale image.  I've looked at it on a MAc at home and a PC at work and it looks the same.  Now if I turn my monitors colors down to like 16 bit and 256 I see some strange artifacts, but no color.  Anyone got any ideas? 
 Hank
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			|  | 03/05/2003 07:09:57 PM · #2 | 
		| | How to fix monitor:FIX MONITOR | 
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			|  | 03/05/2003 08:08:31 PM · #3 | 
		| | | Originally posted by pitsaman: How to fix monitor:FIX MONITOR
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 this is pitsaman's answer to all questions.   LOL
 there are alot of places on the web that talk about calibrating monitors...I use Mac and got a program that is shareware called SuperCal that does an excellent job.  I set my monito to basically mimic a PC (the brightness, etc.).  This program has great info and walks you through it.
 //versiontracker.com/moreinfo.fcgi?id=12756&db=mac
 
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			|  | 03/06/2003 01:49:11 AM · #4 | 
		| | What you see on the screen depends on your "display settings" and the hardware, mainly the graphic card and the monitor itself. If the computer is less than 5 years old and have a reasonably good quality display/graphic card set to 16bit colours, there should not be a problem. The monitor must be able to handle the high resolution too. Another problem could be the user preferences for turning down the brightness/contrast on the monitor. | 
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