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I found this and cannot find any ref to it in here so am wondering if anyone has used this as looking at the spiel it seems an easy app to use.
How to Recover Accidentally Deleted Files on Your Windows PC, Thumb Drive, or SD Card
I found this and cannot find any ref to it in here so am wondering if anyone has used this as looking at the spiel it seems an easy app to use.
How to Recover Accidentally Deleted Files on Your Windows PC, Thumb Drive, or SD Card
Just tried it out, I wasn't looking for anything specific but it found a lot of stuff.
Here's the link to the home page,
UndeleteMyFiles - restore accidentally deleted files from you HDD, USB Flash or SD Card
Those interested in photography like to get a reasonably calibrated monitor so that after you tweak your images you get reasonably accurate prints. Hardware calibration is the way to go but can be expensive. I find Windows software calibration poor but this one I think is quite good and very easy to use.
Calibrize
Calibrize is free software that helps you to calibrate the colors of your monitor in three simple steps. Just download the software and follow the procedure to generate a reliable color 'profile' and adjust the colors of your monitor automatically.
Long winded response...can't make it shorter.
I am a novice to color management.
But the link on Calibrize gives an introduction to color management. If your program supports color management and you enable this then the default color profile as set under Windows color management will be loaded. The standard sRGB setting is fine for most screen viewing and you set your tastes for contrast, brightness and saturation that suites you. I normally set my monitor to "standard" and have things vibrant but contrast and brightness set so I don't get blinded when using Word, Excel etc which have white backgrounds.
BUT
If I'm doing photo editing then I set my monitor to "Custom" and use the defined color profile set as the default *.icm/*.icc profile set up in Windows Color Management. The screen will look more bland but it is the way it will look printed unless you have print autocorrect on your printer or at the store (this takes more control away from you). I use store printing (Big W at the moment) and set the print to non auto correct. I use various photo editing tools which are color managed and I end up getting a print close to how I tweak it on the screen.
This is difficult to do without a calibrated monitor and the utility "Calibrize" appears to do a reasonable job (far better than the Windows inbuilt tool) at generating a display.icm profile.
Ok MJF am sort of getting the gist of it like you I ma no graphics guru so will just have to play around with it:)
I haven't been able to get on the site.