but if you read further, it adjusts monitor settings
I have read further and all I can see is this;
How does this help improve the quality of digital type display?
Traditional computer font rendering assumes that each pixel is either 'on' or 'off', appearing as tiny black squares. Letters appear jagged on the computer screen because they are formed from many of these tiny squares or pixels. Traditional grayscaling assumes that each pixel has no internal structure, so it smooths the jagged edges but sacrifices edge sharpness. ClearType knows that LCDs are made up of colored sub-pixels. ClearType uses a model of the human visual system to choose the brightness values of the sub-pixels. With ClearType, letters on the computer screen appear smooth, not jagged, yet the edges remain sharp.
And all this is in the context of text and a description of anti-aliasing.
The other point is, I can mess about with the clear type settings and do not see any changes on screen other than with text, checked within Qimage therefore colour managed.
It will, screw up the screen colours if you calibrate with it off, then turn it on.
Just leave it on all the time if you are seeing differences.
I'm sure this would have come up long ago if clear type did really affect your calibration. Next time I calibrate and do a validation check, I'll try the check with clear type on and off. That should, I think, be reflected in the dE2000 errors.
Terry.