![]() ![]() Digging into this topic is really difficult and thorny. We did the same thing with their iPhone and they were fine with it.Ĭlick to expand.Thank you Cullen. They understood that the two displays didn't match exactly, but they were at least "ballparkish" to the point where it looked OK. We brought their iMac into our color bay and just eye-matched it to the calibrated LG, and once we did that, all the complaints stopped. We just had a case with a streaming show where the client was concerned because our work didn't look "correct" on their office iMac. ![]() But for online viewing, it's absolutely a crapshoot, totally hinging on the end user's display, the OS, the browser, and so on. I wouldn't have a problem loaning or leasing a client (particularly a long-term client) a calibrated display for the length of the project provided we had a Streambox or Evercast connection. ![]() 1) remote reviewing is not going to work unless the client's display is calibratedĢ) I'm not convinced a MacBook is going to look worth a crap because there's so many variables (including panel uniformity, viewing angle, and so on). ![]()
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