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#11
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On 2015-08-09 05:26, Eric Stevens wrote:
I don't think the problem is anything to do with the colorimeter. Something new has clashed with the software. Some people often have problems with clashing colours, so no surprise. http://windows.microsoft.com/en-ca/w...ement-settings Can't find a Win 10 guide, but the above may lead you into the appropriate rabbit hole. Obligatory snide and superior Mac comment follows. If you MS users don't feel like being humiliated (again) you may stop reading here. On a Mac you would just open SysPrefs - display - color and select the profile of interest (or calibrate from there). You could also use your colour calibration widget and its s/w would save the new profile which in turn would be accessible as above (or set it itself). |
#12
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Problem saving screen profile file.
SaveProfileUsingICM
It doesn't help if you spell the function name wrong. I'm not an expert on this, but for what it's worth: 1) It seems to be trying to delete an old copy and running into a bug in the software. Maybe a dummy file of the same name would satisfy that. 2) Could the ICM file be saved elsewhere and then just copied into the folder? 3) Presumably you have a 64-bit version of the software? 32-bit that's 64-bit-unaware might try to save to System32 and fail. (Against all common sense, System32 is the 64-bit folder on Win64.) 4) If you think permissions are the issue you can "take ownership" of the folder and then give yourself permission. And/or start the program with elevated permissions. (right click option) "net user administrator /active:yes" only makes the real admin account visible at boot. You would then need to log in with that account to be a real admin. I quickly got fed up with that convoluted nonsense when I started to work with Win7 and ended up writing a simple program to *really* free up any file/folder: http://www.jsware.net/jsware/nt6fix.php5#restfix It's free. You're welcome to it. If you're queasy about 3rd-party software look up CACLS and Takeown. Those are command line options that can do the same thing my software does -- just with more work. I *think* the same can be done manually but the restrictions mess is so convoluted I've never been able to quite figure that out for certain. I wonder about permissions if the software used to work. On the other hand, if you're enabling Windows Update without carefully checking exactly what each patch is doing then all bets are off. It seems very odd that the people writing the software have no ideas, but that may be a case for a 3rd-party factor. Those things can be very hard to track down because they're unexpected by nature. Though I suppose you could try killing any process related to Adobe, printer, etc before you do the operation. That wouldn't hurt. Ron Hardin's idea of Process Explorer (sysinternals.com) is good in general, though if you're trying to write a file that doesn't exist it can hardly be locked by another process. |
#13
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Problem saving screen profile file.
In article ,
Alan Browne wrote: On 2015-08-09 05:26, Eric Stevens wrote: I don't think the problem is anything to do with the colorimeter. Something new has clashed with the software. Some people often have problems with clashing colours, so no surprise. http://windows.microsoft.com/en-ca/w...ement-settings Can't find a Win 10 guide, but the above may lead you into the appropriate rabbit hole. Obligatory snide and superior Mac comment follows. If you MS users don't feel like being humiliated (again) you may stop reading here. On a Mac you would just open SysPrefs - display - color and select the profile of interest (or calibrate from there). You could also use your colour calibration widget and its s/w would save the new profile which in turn would be accessible as above (or set it itself). If you'r "savy" and have unsupported hardware then: http://www.argyllcms.com/ + http://dispcalgui.hoech.net/ -- teleportation kills |
#14
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On 8/9/2015 5:39 AM, Savageduck wrote:
snip . Have you installed any fresh printer drivers? Why would he want to do that. Polite ones are easier to get along with. -- PeterN time flies like an arrow fruit flies like a banana |
#15
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On 2015-08-09 15:44:08 +0000, PeterN said:
On 8/9/2015 5:39 AM, Savageduck wrote: snip . Have you installed any fresh printer drivers? Why would he want to do that. Polite ones are easier to get along with. Sigh! -- Regards, Savageduck |
#16
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On Sun, 9 Aug 2015 02:39:45 -0700, Savageduck
wrote: On 2015-08-09 09:29:19 +0000, Eric Stevens said: On Sat, 8 Aug 2015 22:42:19 -0700, Savageduck wrote: There is no reason for iTunes to access color management. I cannot speak for how Windows executes profiles for monitor/display color management. Dammit. I meant Quicktime. Why would QT need to access color management? The OS, be it Win or OSX is going to handle that for QT. I don't know whether it does or not. But it does handle images. Have you installed any fresh printer drivers? Nope. ...and after the July 31 PS update, did you install the PS CC 2015 fix made available on August 5? Yes. But my problems started before July 31 and have continued to this day. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#17
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On Sun, 9 Aug 2015 08:39:26 -0400, Alan Browne
wrote: On 2015-08-09 05:26, Eric Stevens wrote: I don't think the problem is anything to do with the colorimeter. Something new has clashed with the software. Some people often have problems with clashing colours, so no surprise. http://windows.microsoft.com/en-ca/w...ement-settings Nope: it's nothing to do with that. My problem is that the colorimeter can't now save the profiles that the color management needs to use. Can't find a Win 10 guide, but the above may lead you into the appropriate rabbit hole. Been there, done that. Obligatory snide and superior Mac comment follows. If you MS users don't feel like being humiliated (again) you may stop reading here. On a Mac you would just open SysPrefs - display - color and select the profile of interest (or calibrate from there). You could also use your colour calibration widget and its s/w would save the new profile which in turn would be accessible as above (or set it itself). It's supposed to work more or less like that in Windows also, and it would if the Spyder was able to save it's newly generated profile. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#18
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On Sun, 09 Aug 2015 07:59:57 -0400, Ron Hardin
wrote: Ron Hardin wrote: Maybe some service has it open. Try in safe mode, just to limit what starts up. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. Also Process Explorer I think can tell you who has a file open. That's a thought. I will have a try. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#19
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Problem saving screen profile file.
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: There is no reason for iTunes to access color management. I cannot speak for how Windows executes profiles for monitor/display color management. Dammit. I meant Quicktime. Why would QT need to access color management? The OS, be it Win or OSX is going to handle that for QT. I don't know whether it does or not. But it does handle images. everything in os x is colour managed, right down to finder icons. |
#20
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Problem saving screen profile file.
On 2015-08-09 17:29, Eric Stevens wrote:
It's supposed to work more or less like that in Windows also, and it would if the Spyder was able to save it's newly generated profile. Have you contacted the Spyder people? |
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