That website’s colors look terrible!

By Tim Priebe on September 25, 2008 at 6:30 am in Design, Hardware

Sometimes websites look awful. You’ve probably looked at a website and thought the colors were a poor choice. Or maybe you have worked with a web designer and the colors on your site didn’t turn out exactly like you wanted. While it may or may not be the designer’s fault, things are not entirely in his or her control.

Inexpensive monitors (the ones most consumers purchase) each come off the assembly line with slight differences in color. And even after that, the color on those monitors will drift over time. On most monitors, the drift is so small and the life of the monitor short enough, that it just doesn’t matter in day to day use. But when you’re approving designs for your business, that small difference will seem bigger to you.

So there are slight variations just from monitor to monitor, and that’s an unavoidable fact. While your designer can (and should) calibrate their monitors, that won’t let them see exactly what it looks like on your monitor, or anyone else’s, for that matter. All calibration does is give them a good average of what the site will look like on most monitors.

If you are about to embark on some web design work on your computer, or if you’d just like better color, there is an affordable option. While monitor calibrators used to be much more expensive, you can get one like the Spyder 2 Express or the Pantone Huey MEU101 for between $50 and $100. Although I’m not a graphic designer myself, I do use the Spyder 2 Express and calibrate my monitor on a fairly regular basis.

Another, less expensive option, is to simply check your website on a few friends’ computers. Or, failing that, email them a link and ask them if they could check themselves. Get some feedback on the website color. Your monitor may be way off, or it could be that you were absolutely right, and the color is horrible.

Either way, don’t judge your website by its appearance on a single monitor.

Feel The Synergy

By Nick Little on July 16, 2008 at 6:30 am in General

I recently acquired a third monitor to use at work. It is really nice to have three monitors, especially when you have around ten windows open at any given time. However, I had one small problem when I hooked it up: the MacBook I use only has one port for an external monitor.

How is it even possible to hook up another monitor? Well…it isn’t. However, there just happened to be a spare MacMini lying around. This meant I could use Synergy on the Mac mini to give me the same effect as having three monitors hooked up to my MacBook. Synergy allows anyone to use a networked secondary computer as an extended screen. It allows full mouse and keyboard control between the computers. It’s basically a KM switch in software. It also supports basic functionality like copy and paste.

The particular version of Synergy I used is called SynergyKM. It has a visual configuration interface for Macs. It took me a while to setup, because some of the functionality does not work correctly in Leopard. For example, Bonjour cannot be enabled for it to work. Minor quibbles aside, Synergy works amazingly well and is very fast for being network based.