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Review: Pantone Eye-One Display 2 monitor calibration device

A top-of-the-range of monitor calibration device

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Price: £194.94
Manufacturer: Pantone
Specifications: USB
Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Easy to use; ambient light sensor; advanced calibration options
Cons: Lack of advanced documentation; no official dual monitor support; no standalone measurement tools
Overall: Powerful and simple to operate, but while the software is good for basic operation it lacks documentation of advanced features

Paul Monckton, Personal Computer World 04 May 2006

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There's no getting away from the fact that all monitor displays look different.

Even supposedly identical models will vary in the way they reproduce colour and any given monitor will change over time as its components age.

The Eye-One Display 2 from Pantone is a device that measures exactly what your monitor is doing so your software can be sure that what's displayed is what was intended.

The supplied software is easy to use and achieving good results requires no technical knowledge of the mindbending geek-fest that is colour management.

Various colours and shades are displayed on the screen, while the Eye-One Display 2 measures the results.

In this way, Windows can be sure of exactly what colour is actually displayed on your particular monitor when a certain colour is requested by the system.

In standard mode, calibrating your system can be as simple as placing the device on your monitor, selecting either LCD, CRT or laptop mode and accepting the defaults.

Advanced mode lets you select your own white point, gamma and brightness.

You can also measure the white point of the light in your room and use that, or a previously saved ICC (International Colour Consortium) profile, as a target to match your monitor's output to any characteristics you desire.

Unfortunately, if you do want to delve a bit deeper, the supplied documentation extends only to a small getting started guide - this omits some of the more interesting fine-tuning options.

For example, advanced configuration controls allow you to select from two different types of ICC profile, but nowhere is the difference explained.

Once your profile has been created, Windows loads it up at boot time and professional image-editing packages such as Adobe Photoshop will automatically take advantage of the new profile, ensuring consistent results every time.

It's expensive and the majority of PC users will have little need for it, but the Pantone Eye-One Display 2 will definitely appeal to those who demand accurate colours.

Also consider:
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Pantone Huey review
Spyder Pro and Printfix review


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