laptop LCD color temperature request
On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Lucas <macachuto@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear All. > > Since Fedora 13 I am trying to replace my old OpenSuse 11.1 with Fedora and always failed. > The problem is I can't use my laptop LCD picture. After about 20-30 minutes I feel eye strain. Have you looked at installing and configuring redshift on user login? yum info redshift -jef -- devel mailing list devel@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel |
laptop LCD color temperature request
On 06/16/2011 08:10 PM, Jeff Spaleta wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 7:17 AM, Lucas<macachuto@gmail.com> wrote: >> Dear All. >> >> Since Fedora 13 I am trying to replace my old OpenSuse 11.1 with Fedora and always failed. >> The problem is I can't use my laptop LCD picture. After about 20-30 minutes I feel eye strain. > > Have you looked at installing and configuring redshift on user login? > yum info redshift > > > -jef Thanks a lot for your advice, I will play with it. -- devel mailing list devel@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel |
laptop LCD color temperature request
On Thu, Jun 16, 2011 at 9:42 AM, Lucas <macachuto@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks a lot for your advice, I will play with it. The advanced gnome-clock based support for location is busted in gnome3 but the manual lat/lon settings work fine. If you don't want it to transition from day to night color temperature smoothly through out the day... you can set day and night to the same value and use the one-time option. For example: redshift -l 0.:0. -t 6500:6500 -o Just change the -t argument to whatever feels good to you for a static color temp. If you want the day to night transitions you need to put in a reasonable lat/lon for arguments to -l to get the day/time correct. It works really well in F14 with gnome-clock's location awareness I can set my default location in gnome's clock and it will figure out what time of day it is and re-adjust accordingly. What it could use is the ability to interact with geoip as a location provider and pick up your lat lon from your ip address. That would actually not be a hugely difficult feature to hack in and contribute upstream. -jef -- devel mailing list devel@lists.fedoraproject.org https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel |
| All times are GMT. The time now is 08:06 PM. |
VBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO ©2007, Crawlability, Inc.