![]() ![]() I can't believe they have dumbed it down to this extent. What am I missing here? This is supposed to be the world's most sophisticated calibration software, for some of the finest displays on the market. Only the long list of pretty useless "standard" targets were now available, standard meaning you can't edit them. One custom target was allowed, that was it. ![]() CAL1 and CA元 were now greyed out and inaccessible. Why 2? Why not 1? And why, for god's sake, are there only three? I need four or five, for different offset processes on coated/uncoated paper, glossy/matte, web output, in-house inkjet and so on.Īnyway, I then tried to make a second target. I managed to make one target and ran the profiling successfully for that. This used to be right up front - as it should be, it's a core function and the reason you're using a calibrator in the first place. You'd be forgiven for concluding it's no longer possible, so deeply is it buried inside nonsensical, ill-labeled submenus. What were they thinking? I had to RTFM not once, but three times before I discovered that it was, in fact, still possible to create your own calibration targets. Colornavigator 7 is easily the most unintuitive if not counter-intuitive calibrator I have ever used. I had it installed for precisely two days before I gave up, uninstalled it and reinstalled 6. I have a CG246/CX240 pair at work, and a CG2730 at home. #Basiccolor display upgradeAs a long time user of Colornavigator 6, which I always thought was a truly brilliant piece of software, I just built a new machine at work (I'm an art museum photographer) and decided this was a good time to upgrade to version 7. ![]()
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