You spend a large part of your workday staring at it, so why not make it look its best? Not only is a properly calibrated display more attractive, but also it reduces eyestrain and can help produce better-looking prints. Unfortunately, most PC users take their monitor out of the box and make little or no effort to give it the best image it's capable of showing.
While a graphics pro may spend thousands of dollars and many hours tuning a PC monitor's images, anyone can tune up the visuals without spending a dime.
Don't attempt to adjust your display until it has been running for at least 30 minutes. Position the screen to avoid reflections and glare, and reduce the quantity of ambient light in the room.
Begin by optimizing your monitor's resolution, color-depth, and
refresh-rate settings in Windows. For advice on how to adjust these settings,
visit my June 2003
Get to know the controls on your monitor itself. The settings vary from display to display, but all have options for color temperature, brightness, and contrast.
The brightness setting actually controls the darkness, or black point, of your monitor. Set it too low, and dark shades of gray will appear black; set it too high, and your darkest blacks will look gray. Download a gray-scale chart from our site. Once you have it, lower the brightness until the last two dark shades on the chart are black, and then increase the setting until the first shade of gray emerges next to the pure black area.
After you've set your black point, adjust the display's contrast, which actually sets the brightness. Pick a setting that's pleasing to your eye. Brighter isn't always better; contrast settings that are too high can cause blurring on some CRT monitors, as well as increase eyestrain.
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Kirk Steers