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General Discussion
Buying a TV is complicated.
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<blockquote data-quote="KenMasters" data-source="post: 1125713" data-attributes="member: 517"><p>You can do far more than Joel was doing back in the day since some manufacturers actually allow for the adjustment of their TV's LUT directly now. So for absolute accuracy, you can't beat a proper calibration, however, TVs are so accurate today that out the box many would best what you could have achieved via the menu with meters and software back in the day.</p><p></p><p>I calibrate TVs myself, but I don't view it as essential as I once did. These days if a friend asks for a calibration, I tend to just verify by meter rather than bother with the lengthy calibration. It's usually so close on a good TV it's not worth the bother for most people.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="KenMasters, post: 1125713, member: 517"] You can do far more than Joel was doing back in the day since some manufacturers actually allow for the adjustment of their TV's LUT directly now. So for absolute accuracy, you can't beat a proper calibration, however, TVs are so accurate today that out the box many would best what you could have achieved via the menu with meters and software back in the day. I calibrate TVs myself, but I don't view it as essential as I once did. These days if a friend asks for a calibration, I tend to just verify by meter rather than bother with the lengthy calibration. It's usually so close on a good TV it's not worth the bother for most people. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Buying a TV is complicated.
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