I am not sure that I understand what you mean.
Just someone who's contributing nothing but putting a link up, criticising those that are helping you. Don't worry about it.
So is this pretty useless to me? I thought if I profiled my monitor I would be much closer to being accurate. I am pretty sure I can not exchange this sense I already used it. Dang it. Is the only software that does the best job the 450 colormunki?
No it's not useless. It's important to know that what you see is accurate, so having a calibrated monitor is always a good thing. It just will not calibrate your print media, which is why I suggested the Color Munki Design in post #9. The slightly cheaper Color Munki Photo can print profile too.
Which have you bought? Display, Design, or Photo? There's a few versions of Color Munki. Design and Photo can profile print media... display is just for monitors.
This is Display
http://xritephoto.com/ph_product_overview.aspx?id=1513&catid=149&action=overview
This is Photo
http://xritephoto.com/ph_product_overview.aspx?id=1115
This is Design
http://www.colormunki.com/product/show?is_designer_type=true
Photo and Design are the only ones in the color munki range that can profile print media. Photo is a little cheaper usually, but both Design and Photo are an all in one solution for monitor and media profiling. Either Photo or Design is what you want for print profiling as well.
Try printing first though, as it may not be far out as you think and as the Photo and Design are much more expensive, it's worth seeing what's what first.... also, most printer manufacturers usually have off the shelf profiles you can download. There's a webpage for Canon ICC profiles for the Pixma100 here.
http://www.usa.canon.com/cusa/consumer/standard_display/3rd_party_papers
This is for third party papers. Each profile is for a specific paper type, and will only be accurate when using Canon inks. There will be a profile available for Canon papers too somewhere on the website as well... but I can't find the link.
Download the profiles you need, and (Windows) either right click and select install, or manually copy it to C:\Windows\system32\spool\drivers\color
Then when you print, print from Photoshop.. NOT from Windows or the Printer's own software, and make sure you do NOT let the printer manage the colours, but instead use the ICC profiles you just installed from the drop down menu that appears after selecting "Photoshop manages colors".
The exact settings vary from printer to printer. My main photo printer is not networked so can't access it from here, so this is what I get with my crappy office printer, but there will always be the main important things that I have highlighted in red. Never let the printer manage colours, and always select the correct profile for the paper and inks being used, and have the rendering intent settings set to "Perceptual".. which I forgot to do in the quick screen grab above.
If printing from Lightroom, there will also be an option to select whether the printer manages colour or not.. and again, do not use this option.. instead select "other" and choose the correct profile for your media from the list.