Originally posted by: wadetv
The reason that I bring up callibration is if one of your settings is messed up along the way it might look fine on your computer monitor but willl look messed up on people's TVs.
The reason that I bring up callibration is if one of your settings is messed up along the way it might look fine on your computer monitor but willl look messed up on people's TVs.
Yeah, I'd agree that calibration is a laudable aim. Unfortunately, to the best of my knowledge Moth3r is right, and there is no PAL-spec calibration disc available. The best you can do, it seems, is to calibrate your monitor as best you can, and then capture so your picture looks "right". Not at all rigorous, but I guess it'll have to do.