Yep, I use a nice alternative program written in Rust:
https://github.com/DerFetzer/spectro-cam-rsSpectro-cam offers calibration. *But* I do not believe a webcam spectrometer can be satisfactory calibrated by spectral response because camera definitely demonstrates strong non-linearity. May be if you take care of selecting a fixed gain (exposure) and disable all dynamic range adaptations in control panel. If this is possible at all...
Regarding reddish color with the cathode part of a barrier discharge. Yes I noticed this as well. A probable explanation is that cathode part of the discharge often shows significantly different excitation of different gas wavelengths due to much higher electron temperature. And different balance of UV + visible lines may mean slightly different color balance of triphosphor components radiation (plus visible light from the discharge). Remember classic Xe/Ne filled plasma balls, where cathode parts clearly show red Ne excitation and discharge columns are blue-gray xenon?
From the recent experiments: here you can compare a spectrum captured from TN20 neon lamp (mostly cathode glow, see orange 585nm Ne line is excited preferentially) and a spectrum captured off a discharge column of a neon sign tube, 585nm is weak and ~640nm + a line cluster around is radiated as much redder light. A confounding factor to note here is also TN20 is filled most likely with Penning mix while the sign tube is 100% neon - here i am sure as I filled it myself
