還有這篇 "Here's an in-depth reply (from the Betterlight forum):
Greetings, fellow betterlight users. I lurk here and I try to keep my mouth shut ;-) I can't spend too much time on this right now so forgive me if I don't respond to questions quickly. For those of you who don't know me I was the architect of the Sony Artisan, the Radius PressView, ColorMatch, ProSense and many other products. I have worked with display technology both CRT and LCD for the last 15 years.
Color accurate LCDs pose many problems. I will not argue the CRT vs LCD debate. Suffice to say there are elements of a calibrated CRT that still can't be matched by any LCD - available - and there are also elements of LCD technology that exceed CRTs. We are improving things at a rapid pace. I expect within 2-3 years to be able to finally feel comfortable stating that we have an all around superior product in the LCD space.
I am writing this email to attempt to dispel some myths and provide some guidance for your LCD purchasing. You can't buy a good CRT any more, the only ones left are of poor quality because the cost has been reduced so much all the expensive quality components are not used anymore. There was a reason that some CRTs cost 2-3K - the parts were very expensive. Now the analog electronics use VLSI to reduce cost, resulting in poor comparative quality.
1) A wide gamut LCD display is not a good thing for most (95%) of high end users. The data that leaves your graphic card and travels over the DVI cable is 8 bit per component. You can't change this. The OS, ICC CMMs, the graphic card, the DVI spec, and Photoshop will all have to be upgraded before this will change and that's going to take a while. What does this mean to you? It means that when you send RGB data to a wide gamut display the colorimetric distance between any two colors is much larger. As an example, lets say you have two adjacent color patches one is 230,240,200 and the patch next to it is 230,241,200. On a standard LCD or CRT those two colors may be around .8 Delta E apart. On an Adobe RGB display those colors might be 2 Delta E apart on an ECI RGB display this could be as high as 4 delta E.
It's very nice to be able to display all kinds of saturated colors you may never use in your photographs, however if the smallest visible adjustment you can make to a skin tone is 4 delta E you will become very frustrated very quickly.
2) More bits in the display does not fix this problem. 10 bit LUTs, 14 Bit 3D LUTs, 10 bit column drivers, time-domain bits, none of these technologies will solve problem 1. Until the path from photoshop to the pixel is at least 10 bits the whole way, I advise sticking to a display with something close to ColorMatch or sRGB.
3) Unless the display has "TRUE 10 bit or greater 1D LUTs that are 8-10-10" user front panel controls for color temp, blacklevel and gamma are useless for calibration and can in fact make things worse. An 8-10-8 3D LUT will not hurt things and can help achieve a fixed contrast ratio which is a good thing.
Only Mitsubishi/NEC displays with "GammaComp" have 8-10-8 3D LUTs at this time. Some Samsung displays may have this I don't test many of their panels as the performance in other areas has been lacking.
Only the Eizo 210, 220 and NEC2180WG have 8-10-10 paths. If you really want to know... the path in the Eizo is "8-14bit3D-8-10bit1D-10" go figure that one out ;-) The 2180WG has an actual 10 bit DVI interface with a 10-10-10 path but nothing supports it so you can't use it yet - but for $6500 your ready when it does ;-)
4) The testing methodology for the seybold report article was very poor. It demonstrates the authors complete lack of understanding with regards to LCD calibration. At some point I may write a full rebuttal. As an example the fact that Apple's display has no controls other than backlight is actually a very good thing for an 8-8-8 LCD if your going to use calibration. Apple optimizes the factory LUTs so as to provide the most individual colors. smooth greyscale and the least loss. Then the calibration is done in the graphic card LUT. As these are all 8 bit it's best if the user does not mess with the display LUTs at all. Overall Lab to Lab Delta E of 23 patches is a very poor metric to evaluate a display. It completely leaves out many areas of color space (the tool they used is designed to make the colorimeter look good so tuff patches are not included) contrast ratio, stability, aging, greyscale performance and other important considerations.
Many people ask for my recommendations. I am not happy with anything we have right now. That said I can evaluate what there is.
Price performance wise the great bargain is the NEC 1980SXI BK the price/vs colorimetric performance of this display can't be beat. The 2180ux Is a great display at a reasonable but high end price.
In the mid-high wide screen I like the Apple and the SONY. Reject the display if uniformity is bad and make sure whomever you buy it from will exchange it.
The Eizo 210 is great if you can justify the current cost. Give it two years and most high-end displays should perform at this level. 220 is a great display but suffers from all the downfalls of any wide gamut display.
There is no reason to buy the La Cie 321 it's just an NEC with their label on it and an extra $400.
The Monaco Optix XR is the best colorimeter for LCDs at this time.