I'm sure all of you with TN monitors are aware with the problems associated with viewing angle and gamma curves. On my 22'' LG monitor I notice a big difference in gamma even from the top of the screen to the bottom. It's very off-putting in movies, and makes calibrating my display a real pain.
I can think of two possible solutions to this problem.
Firstly, a program to generate a gamma 'gradient', if you will, that covers the entire screen and corrects for gamma differences at the top and bottom. It would probably be pretty simple to make and shouldn't take up much resources.
Secondly, a thin acrylic sheet with a printed gradient, similar to the filters lighting technicians use. This would be much expensive and probably would require customised gradients for each customer.
My question is, do either of these, or similar solutions to this problem exist?
I can think of two possible solutions to this problem.
Firstly, a program to generate a gamma 'gradient', if you will, that covers the entire screen and corrects for gamma differences at the top and bottom. It would probably be pretty simple to make and shouldn't take up much resources.
Secondly, a thin acrylic sheet with a printed gradient, similar to the filters lighting technicians use. This would be much expensive and probably would require customised gradients for each customer.
My question is, do either of these, or similar solutions to this problem exist?