John Hill wrote:

> This figure even when calculated on a one screen use basis is so small that
> there surely is no point is going for less than the best kit for the job.
> 
> 
> Which is......???

OK I'm game - Say:
�500 for a good calibrator (you can get �200 solutions)
Suppose 20 hours use per week 47 weeks per year in three years

That is 20 x 47 x 3 = 2820 hours
Divide that by purchasing cost (500)

And it's boils down to �5,64 an hour.

That is of course provided that you only use the system on one monitor and
only for 20 hours/week and only for 3 years.

The question is if this is too much to pay to know what you are doing,
rather than to guess...


Best Regards

Thomas Holm / Pixl ApS

- Photographer & Colour Management Expert
- Adobe Certified Training Provider in Photoshop�
- Imacon Authorized Scanner Training Facility
- Remote Profiling Service (Output ICC profiles)
- Seminars speaker and tutor on CM and Digital Imaging etc.

- Home Page: www.pixl.dk � Email: th[AT]pixl.dk
-- 


===============================================================
GO TO http://www.prodig.org for ~ GUIDELINES ~ un/SUBSCRIBING ~ ITEMS for SALE

Reply via email to