Quote:
Originally Posted by shinew
hmm... based on your comment, I assume you must be an expert in understanding how color science works, and of course know what a spectrophotometer is, how it works, and how it's used?
The one I have is used by thousands of professional print shop world wide and it's been tested/used for far more demanding job than for this purpose. If that's not up to your standard for "scientific" and "controlled testing", could you explain what you would do to improve the testing methodology and perhaps show us the correct way? I have access to quite a few color related instruments. If it makes sense, I'll modify my method and report back the result. I'm more than happy to learn something from all of this.
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You still don't get it. You're so caught up in wanting people to bow down to the scientific method that you don't understand that what people see is what matters to them as far as the display goes. If a person can see that Display A looks better than Display B, then that is what he's going to be comfortable with. He's not going to read on what appears to him to be an inferior display because numbers say so.