Hmm the difference between computers could be down to the display, the colour profile being used by the display (set in Windows), or the number of bits per pixel set for the desktop (set in Windows). Most LCD displays can only display 12 bit colour - i.e. 12bits for all colours (red through green through blue) whereas doing RGB with OSC will return more colours than the LCD panel can display. RGB Mono is 16bits for each colour, so LRGB would be 16+16+16+16 = 64 bits and way beyond the LCD! Note - not all colours are used, stretching the image attempts to fit the colours.
The sigma stacking is a way of stacking (after alignment) that analyses each frame in the stack and if there are differences (outside configured thresholds), it will reject the pixels.
I've attached an example of what Sigma stacking can do - below is a low light level photo, with a hand held cannon ixus IS80 that only saves jpegs. 10 images, aligned then sigma stacked (windsored) - though glass. You'll note the lack of reflection and the high signal to noise ratio.