I have no idea whether the OP's Dell U2713HM is one of those monitors. There are some newer / fancier monitors that have internal calibration facilities that don't work with the ColorMunki Display and/or its software (or its successor, the i1Studio Display), but may work with fancier i1 Display colorimeters and/or their software. If the ColorMunki Display 1.1.4 software builds a proper ICC display profile, saves it in the proper directory, and sets the Windows Color Management control panel to make it the default profile, then there is no problem with either the colorimeter itself or its software. But is the Munki Software outdated or the old software? It seems many of the devices for calibration, at lest when i researched them, now price everything much higher, or greatly limit what the software does. If you don't get here or otherwise find a good answer, you might try the PC Talk forum. Then that really sounds to me more like a problem with Windows, not a problem with the ColorMunki Display or its associated software. The display is stuck on its uncalibrated, factory default. icm profile set as the default on the 'Devices' and 'Advanced' tabs, both at the user and system default level. Just to confirm, I use i1-Studio V1.5.1 as well. Last but not least, even though ColorMunki Display 1.1.4 is the 'current' version, AFAIK X-Rite does not recommend it for 64-bit operating systems, and instead recommends the current i1Studio software (version 1.5.1 now, I think)-which I have also used, and which works fine. Have you checked immediately after profiling? On the Devices tab, is the profile you want listed and marked "(default)"? On the Advanced tab, is it listed under Windows Color System Defaults, Device profile? If not, have you tried setting it? Does the setting persist?Īll of that said, I seem to recall having some issues with some (older, I think) versions of the ColorMunki Display software not initially setting these for the profile I'd just made. Anyway, the place to check is the Color Management control panel:īoth the Devices and the Advanced tabs. I don't know precisely what "Win 10 Enterprise LTSC" means I'm more used to designations like version 1909, 2004, 20H2, and how 21H1. It sounds like your problem is more likely to be with Windows. I have changed my Color Management settings - both at the user and system-wide level - to use the latest color profile as the default, to no avail. I do not have Dell drivers installed for the display, just Microsoft's Generic PnP driver. Sometimes the profile will "hold" for hours, other times it will default back in seconds. Once the profile randomly goes back to the uncalibrated, factory default, the only way to get it back is to re-calibrate the display. I am running ColorMunki Display 1.1.4.0, and am experiencing profile loss/switching for no discernible reason. Pioneer BDR-209DBK 16x Blu-Ray/CD/DVD WriterĭK9008 Shine II White LED Backlit Keyboard (Brown MX)Īnker 5-Button 1000/1600 DPI Wired Vertical Mouse WD Red Plus NAS HDD 5400 RPM SATA III 64MB HGST Deskstar NAS HDD 4TB 7200RPM SATA III 64MB Intel 1TB 665p Series M.2 2280 PCIe NVMe 3.0 x4 3D3 Please let us know if the issue persists.Intel Core i7-9700K Coffee Lake 3.6GHz Eight-CoreĬorsair Vengeance LPX 32GB (4x8GB) DDR4 DRAM 3200MHz Repeat the process until you get the Microsoft Basic Display Adapter.Ĥ.Once you do, please proceed with the clean install of the latest graphics driver version.ĥ.Once the latest driver has been installed, you may enable the internet connection again. If it does, please remove it and restart your computer one more time. Go to Windows* Device Manager and check if Windows* installed another version of the graphics driver. Uninstalling the Intel® Display Audio Driver or the Intel® HDMI Audio Driver via the Device Manager Method.ģ.Restart your computer. Uninstalling the Intel Graphics Driver via the Device Manager Method To do this, please follow the steps on the link below under these sections: Since you are running non-DCH drivers, you may try these steps to perform a clean install of the graphics driver:ġ.Disconnect your unit from the Internet.Ģ.Uninstall both the Intel Graphics driver and the Intel Display audio driver. NOTE: This link is being offered for your convenience and should not be viewed as an endorsement by Intel of the content, products, or services offered there.ī. I found the following information at your system manufacturer's support website. Have you tried performing a clean install of the latest Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) driver? The report attached shows two graphics driver versions that may be causing a driver conflict. We tested the Display Color Calibration in Windows*, and Windows* applied the changes successfully.
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