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You'd need to do photographic work indoors in no more than moderate lighting. Trouble is, the resulting brightness level is likely to be fairly low (say, 100-120cd/m2) which might be rather dim outdoors in daylight. And then you don't touch any screen adjustment or it messes the calibration. For any screen (not just a laptop) you want fixed brightness, contrast etc which you use for photography, having calibrated and profiled the display. However, it screws any calibration/profiling. It also means the screen adapts to different ambient lighting: the brightness level you need in outdoor daylight is going to be eye-popping indoors at night. This is a sensible thing for gaming, as it gets the best dynamic range in any given circumstances. However, one feature of many laptops is that screen characteristics change with ambient light, battery charge and for all I know the phase of the moon. It has an IPS display and might be good for photography (have to look for non-gamer reviews to get more information). Please let me know if you have any experience with this type of computer - if not could you let me know what specifications I could ask the MSI forum in order to find whether this laptop is suitable to work with a printer instead of buying an external monitor. I know nothing about computers but do not want to buy an EISO monitor if my laptop has good RGB gumat capacity and can be calibrated.
#ADJUST MSI CAMERA SETTINGS PRO#
However, my hubby bought me a gaming computer - an MSI GT72S 6GE Dominator pro G. Many people have told me that the quality of the screen is not good enough to use for printing, therefore not worth calibrating. Confused about whether it is worth color calibrating my laptop.