- May 19, 2011
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A nugget of knowledge I picked up in recent years is that for HDMI-connected monitors, one should double-check the graphics driver settings to ensure that the full range of colours are enabled for that screen, because the default setting is only to show a limited range.
I'm baffled by this, because just how often is it exactly that a PC shouldn't attempt to display as full a colour range as it possibly can?
The first time I encountered this setting I believe was on a Lenovo laptop with an AMD graphics driver (AMD centre > display > pixel format). With an Intel driver one needs to go into Intel HD Graphics Control Panel > Display > Advanced Settings, then there's a section labelled 'quanization range'. There's a similar setting in the nvidia control panel, one needs to enable a custom range then choose the option for the full colour range.
Without enabling this setting, colours have a more washed-out look to them. It's not terribly obvious, but enabling the full colour range makes a noticeable difference with more full, vibrant colours.
I'm baffled by this, because just how often is it exactly that a PC shouldn't attempt to display as full a colour range as it possibly can?
The first time I encountered this setting I believe was on a Lenovo laptop with an AMD graphics driver (AMD centre > display > pixel format). With an Intel driver one needs to go into Intel HD Graphics Control Panel > Display > Advanced Settings, then there's a section labelled 'quanization range'. There's a similar setting in the nvidia control panel, one needs to enable a custom range then choose the option for the full colour range.
Without enabling this setting, colours have a more washed-out look to them. It's not terribly obvious, but enabling the full colour range makes a noticeable difference with more full, vibrant colours.
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