I tried the proposed solutions to no avail. I did upgrade to IE9 and all it did was make evrything lite white background. I've tried to change background colors in both IE and Windows 7 without improvement. There seems tobe a probl;em in the start routine before I enter IE9. Login goes from a nice dark blue to very very lite blue when the desktop appears. From there on the screen background is white and all coloring is dim. I not sure what to do. Any suggestions as to where I go from here.
My experience with this problem was the Microsoft screen display options. Use the basic screen background options, not the Aero option screens. I just proved this to myself by changing from Aero to basic and back. When in Aero screen, the windows fade in and out; very slow. To change, rightclick desktop, click personalize. Pick the Windows 7 Basic Theme.
The fade will quit. Choose where you want to search below Search Search the Community. Search the community and support articles Windows Windows 7 Search Community member. When I boot up with Windows 7 my screen is lite in color and definition. After I input password it gets dark and clean. Blinks when desktop comes up then gets lite again, blinks then dark and good definition. No more problems until in need to go to task manager or screen saver kicks in. Upon moving mouse to recall screen and desktop reappears, but very lite in color.
The Display Color Calibration wizard will now launch. Things to look out for include the color sliders, which should all be at 50, and the gamma setting. If your monitor allows it, you may also want to move the OSD to the side so you can get an uninterrupted view of the calibration window.
The wizard will now show you what a display with correctly optimized gamma should look like. Essentially, you want the dots in the middle to be a grey tone that blends, rather than a black or white circle.
It may instead have the option of several presets, in which case you should select the one that looks closest to use and use the monitor calibration slider to get the rest of the way.
This should remedy issues if your Windows 10 colors are washed out. Again, Windows 10 will show you what a good brightness and contrast ratio looks like. Your computer's screen is the main way you interact with it, so any minor issue can quickly become a significant one. There are several reasons why your monitor might distort images or represent color improperly, resulting in whatever specific issue you see, so let's walk through some troubleshooting until we figure it out.
Most of these are easy things to try, but a few of these tasks might be more difficult or unfamiliar than others. If so, take your time and be sure to reference any instructions on other pages if you need extra help. Power off the monitor, wait 15 seconds, and then power it back on. Some issues, especially very minor ones, can be caused by very temporary issues with your computer's connection that a restart will fix. If the problem goes away but quickly returns, especially if it's color-related, try leaving the screen off for 30 minutes before powering it back on.
If that helps, your monitor may be suffering from overheating. Restart your computer. There's a slight chance that an operating system issue is the cause of the discoloration or distortion, and a simple restart will do the trick. Restarting is an easy thing to try early in the troubleshooting process. Check the cable between the monitor and the computer to make sure that each end is physically secure. Completely unplug, and plug back in, each end to be sure.
Newer interfaces, like HDMI , often "push" in and "pull" out, meaning gravity can sometimes eventually work them loose from both the monitor side and the computer side.
Degauss the monitor. Yes, this is very much some "throwback" advice, considering that magnetic interference, which degaussing corrects, only happens on those large CRT monitors of yesteryear. That said, if you're still using a CRT screen and the discoloration issues are focused near the edges of the screen, degaussing will most likely fix the problem. Using your monitor's adjustment buttons or onscreen settings, find the preset default level and enable it. This preset should return your monitor's many settings to "factory default" levels, correcting any color issues caused by settings.
If you have an idea about what's "off" with your colors, feel free to manually adjust individual settings like the brightness, color balance, saturation, or temperature, etc. Adjust the color quality setting for the video card. Setting it at the highest level possible will often help resolve issues where the colors, especially in photos, appear incorrect.
Fortunately, newer versions of Windows only support the highest color options possible, so this is probably a worthwhile thing to look into only if you're using Windows 7, Vista, or XP.
0コメント