On Friday 03 March 2006 01:15 pm, PLinnell wrote: > Hi, > > Never ever use anything but a profile generated for your monitor, > otherwise all bets are off for color previews. > > I just refreshed the section on creating profiles with lprof for > Linux. Here: > http://docs.scribus.net/index.php?lang=en&page=moncal&subpage=1 > the rest of the color management docs are getting redone right now > for 1.3.x
I will add this to the links page on the lprof web site. Thanks for updating this. One comment about the content. While apps like kgamma and tkgamma will allow users to adjust the monitor gamma the chart used by these is one that is not particularly repeatable or consistant in actual use. An app named monica uses the Norman Koren gamma chart which is the same one used in lprof. This chart is much better than those used in most gamma setting apps and Norman claims that it allows for the gamma to be consistently set with a tolerance +-0.1. My experience is that this is a very conservative claim and I think that the actual tolerance is closer to +-0.05. I highly recommend monica as the best app for this function. > > On Windows, if you have Adobe Gamma, you can use that to create a > decent monitor profile visually. It will not be as accurate as > hardware created profile. > > The older littlecms profilers and manual for windows are available > here: > http://web.archive.org/web/20041009161611/http://www.littlecms.com/profiler >s.htm A better link for this stuff is: http://gkall.hobby.nl/sane-lprof/sane-lprof.html This page belongs to one of the current lprof developers. > > I expect we will see a new lprof available for Windows by the next > release. Lprof now has a volunteer who is working on the Windows port. I had already done a significant amount of Windows porting work on 1.11.0 and other work since that time has been very careful about keeping the code base portable. But I am not a Windows person and I thought that someone who was would do it more justice. It took a while to find a volunteer but Joe Pizzi stepped forward about a week ago and is highly qualified. He now has the Windows port of the current CVS code to the point where it builds and runs. His changes have also been regression tested on Linux. This still needs more testing and I suspect some fixes before it is released. It will also be necessary to package it into an installer. The current plan is to release the Windows binary along with the next source tarball as version 1.11.4 some time in the next few weeks. By the way current CVS is internationalized (as will the next release) and we are looking for volunteers to do translations for the GUI. If you are interested in volunteering please contact me. I would like to have at least a handful of good translations before the next release. Right now the only one that is even close is the Russian translation which is also the only one where someone has volunteered to do the work. Hal > > On peut parle en francais sur IRC aussi. :) > > Hope that helps, > Peter > > > _______________________________________________ > Scribus mailing list > Scribus at nashi.altmuehlnet.de > http://nashi.altmuehlnet.de/mailman/listinfo/scribus
