Eberhard Werle

Eberhard Werle specializes in lean, single-purpose utilities that solve very specific display problems without bloated interfaces or licensing overhead. The company’s only public release, QuickGamma, distills monitor calibration to a drag-and-drop executable that loads a gamma ramp directly into the graphics driver, letting photographers, CAD operators, and gamers correct color drift in seconds instead of navigating labyrinthic control-panel menus. Typical use cases include matching dual-monitor setups in design studios, compensating for aging laptop panels that wash out shadows, or preparing ad-hoc projection rigs for color-critical presentations. Because the tool writes no registry keys and consumes under a megabyte of disk space, it is often sideloaded onto lab computers, conference-room PCs, and live-event rigs where IT policies forbid full-scale calibration suites. The publisher’s minimalist philosophy extends to documentation: a two-page PDF explains the underlying ICC workflow, while the program itself offers only three sliders—red, green, and blue gamma—plus a reference patch generator that produces neutral grayscale wedges for visual confirmation. Despite its spartan feature set, QuickGamma supports multiple graphics APIs and Windows color profiles, so downstream applications such as Photoshop, Blender, or HDR games inherit the corrected curve without further user intervention. Eberhard Werle’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources like winget, always fetching the latest version and allowing silent batch installation alongside other utilities.

QuickGamma

QuickGamma is a small utility program to calibrate a monitor on the fly without having to buy expensive hardware tools.

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