In recent years many software providers have helped to address this concern, helping with eye strain and sleep patterns. F.lux is perhaps the most noteworthy of the bunch, as their application single-handedly brought the topic to the table among techies who have slowly but surely started adopting it years ago.
Major operating systems have also begun building in an option for filtering out blue light, including Windows 10 (with the Fall Creators Update), macOS, Apple iOS, Android, and Amazon's Fire tablets.
Even though the initial impression of the yellow hue effect might shock you, your eyes will ease into the change. Once the colors settle in, you won't want to go back to the regular colors during the night as they difference in eye strain will be significant.
We'll provide brief walkthroughs for some of those operating systems, but F.lux has been around for about a decade now and is available on every major platform (download here). The software uses your location to match the sun cycle in your area, gradually adjusting your display color from 6500K (daylight) to warmer colors with less blue light as nighttime approaches.
You can also manually change the temperature of your display between eight different colors, 6500K (daylight) being the brightest (blue/white) and 1200K (described as "ember") being the dimmest (orange/yellow).
This can be reduced further by using the "Himalayan Salt Lamp" setting found under "Effects and extra colors." Other effects include "Darkroom mode" which makes your background black and text/interface red, "Emerald City" which applies a green tint, and "Soft White" which makes the daylight hue less fatiguing in our opinion, and it can be used in conjunction with the "Reduce Eyestrain" profile option.
Of note, F.lux can be enabled/disabled with hotkeys and you can set it up so it disables itself automatically when you switch to and from specific applications (say, Photoshop or something where you need the color accuracy).
For those of you with connected lighting systems, the software lists support for Philips Hue, Philips ColorKinetics intelliWhite, YeeLight and LIFX.
Other alternatives to F.lux: SunsetScreen | Iris | Redshift
Folks with the Windows 10 Creators Update can enable the "Night light" feature found in Settings > System > Display, which will automatically apply a similar filter to your display as the sun sets and then remove it at the sun rises.
Along with the ability to set custom hours, you can tweak the temperature of the filter with a manual slider in "Night light settings" and the feature can be enabled/disabled without returning to the settings by using the button in the Action Center (beside the Windows clock).
MacOS users from Sierra 10.12.4 onward have an option called "Night Shift" which can be found by navigating to SystemPreferences > Displays > Night Shift (tab)and provides about the same level of functionality as already described for Windows 10.
Night Shift is also available on select iOS devices (iPhone 5s onward, iPod Touch 6G, iPad Air and newer, iPad Mini 2 and newer, and iPad Pro), head to Settings > Display & Brightness > Night Shift.
Android N (or better) provide a "Night Light" feature. The actual name might vary depending on your phone's manufacturer but you should be able to make it out. Head to the Notifications menu >Gear icon > Display > Night Light.
Amazon Fire tablet owners... head to Notifications menu > Settings > Display > Blue Shade.
Masthead photo: Jack Daniel Ocampo Palacios on Unsplash
The Dignified BotNarcissism and Pleasure: An Interview with Yvonne Rainer by Robert StorrThe Literary Prize for the Refusal of Literary PrizesRedux: James Baldwin, Raymond Carver, Dorothea Lasky by The Paris ReviewArt from Guantánamo by Erin ThompsonThe Questionable Category of “Native American Literature”A Study of Kanai MiekoHow Original Are You? by Robert ShoreReading the Police BlotterThe Tenuous Nonfiction of Clarice Lispector's CrônicasRevisited: Watership DownStates of Desire: An Interview with Anne GarrétaCelebrating Umoja Karamu, a “Ritual for the Black Family”A Message from ‘The Paris Review’ StaffThe Surprising History (and Future) of PaperweightsListen: Hemingway's Unrequited High School CrushDear Lynda: Loveless Triangles and Hopeless Indecision by Lynda BarryNarcissism and Pleasure: An Interview with Yvonne Rainer by Robert StorrStaff Picks: Interwar, War, and PostwarBook Ideas from the Bottom of the Barrel 5 ways 'Stray' nails playing as a cat Man has photoshoot with McDonald's hash browns after night of drinking Trump’s comment about raking to prevent wildfires gets lambasted by Finns Forget Eddie, this 'Stranger Things 4' character was the real MVP How to use Live Text on a video in iOS 16 Throw some cheese on your dog because the internet said so This girl realizing we don't 'live inside the earth' is better than most reality TV This brutally honest reporter perfectly sums up how Brexit is going Apple M2 MacBook Air teardown reveals an odd detail The preferred methods of extreme Instagram lurkers Kid delivers perfect scowl on picture day Samsung's new foldable phones to launch in August, leaker says Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 and Z Flip 4 pictures leak 'Elden Ring' Grand Lift medallions: Where to find them, what you'll face New Russian law bans crypto payments for goods and services The Twitter bots that make the internet a little bit nicer How erotic fanfiction lets women explore their sexuality without shame YouTuber Lilly Singh is taking a break to focus on her mental health Netflix's ad tier won't have all of the usual content Tesla sold most of its Bitcoin, but none of its Dogecoin
2.0206s , 10157.5703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Don’t Believe The Hole Online】,Openness Information Network