It allows adjustments for the display settings and configuration of the monitor.
Magic Tune is a piece of software that allows adjustments for the display settings and configuration of the monitor in a more advanced and precise way than using the monitor's built-in menu.
- MagicBright: increases the brightness and the intensity of the monitors; it has 6 defaults profiles that give the most appropriate brightness for text, Internet, games, sports, movies or customized.
- MagicColor: to improve the quality, sharpness and color saturation of digital images.
- MagicZone: allows you to establish a set of hue, saturation, brightness and sharpness that you will be able to apply to areas of your screen when required, just click on the MagicZone icon that appears on the taskbar.
- Options: from here you can select the interface language among the following: English, French, German, Italian, Korean, Chinese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Portuguese and Turkish.
Version 1.1 is compatible with Windows 2000/2003/XP and works in both CDT and LCD monitors, but as this is an update of the Magic Tune versions 3.6 and 4.0, you must first install the basic versions just mentioned, and then the Magic Tune 1.0 Premium.
Pros
- It includes advanced configuration tools, such as MagicBright, MagicColor, and MagicZone
- The interface is available in 11 languages
- It includes local help information in the language selected
- It's a freeware
Cons
- It's and update, so you need the previous editions
- The update doesn't create shortcuts so it can be confusing
- The color calibration process is far from being intuitive
Upon installation I encountered a couple of problems (not sure if this software is the reasoning behind it). First my system didn't want to boot (for the first time), then my Baidu AV goes crazy taking 1.3GB of my RAM for some reason (had to uninstall it), then this software didn't even want to run (kept crashing) and finally when trying to uninstall it a message popped up saying there was an error with the uninstallation (first time in my life seeing this message). If this isn't malware, then it surely does act like one.