No difference in that actually and nothing between those two being the best. I can't remember but I think that 9300K looks a little redder and 6500K looks a little bluer. The 9300K and 6300K are industry standard. So, if you set your monitor to 6300K and set say, Adobe Photoshop's colour setting to 6300K, it will match the colours so you don't have either red, green or blue more richer or duller than one another.
Normally, if you are doing graphics, you normally adjust these to match your colours. So, what you see on your monitor is what you get when you print. Of course, it also depends on the printer ink you are using. It's important for us graphic designers as you don't want to accident mix up while designing and find out after 3 days of work, all your red colours look duller when you print out.
Some monitors allows this setting and others don't. Normally, I set it to 6300K, it feels 'cooler'.
2006-08-10 17:04:59
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answer #1
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answered by tvliew 2
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These are the color temperature presets for your monitor. 6500K and sRGB are the setting that closely match those used by digital cameras and DVD's so that's probably the best for computing use.
2006-08-10 17:08:16
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answer #2
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answered by Fremen 6
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Depends on what you want to do. I know that I use a laptop in my classroom attached to a t.v. to show the students what is on my screen and I have to change the color settingto get it to work. I don't know why though.
2006-08-10 17:02:04
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answer #3
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answered by embem171 4
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u chose RGB and then adjust to ur choice or taste ...
others are the given format with great display(9300k) ...
2006-08-10 18:54:43
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answer #4
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answered by Manis 4
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whichever looks the best to you, it is a user option
2006-08-10 17:45:16
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answer #5
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answered by butchell 6
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