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    How do I get rid of "earliest wake time"?

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    • A
      asdoäåifhasuiloth
      last edited by

      What I'm asking for is simple. To have f.lux follow the sun. Orange when the sun is down, white while the sun is up. This is how the software used to work for years and why I've been using it for years.

      I live in Finland, and here sun starts rising at after 3AM, and it's fully light out around 4.30. If I'm using a computer in room full of sunlight at 4.30 I don't want the monitor to be yellow. That does not mean I want the screen to start turning yellow at 5pm, when it's 5 HOURS UNTIL UNSET (according to f.lux itself) which it does if I set earliest wake time to 4.30

      I don't want an overly complicated alarm clock. I just want a software that adjusts the light according to the sun's movement. If you want to add a crappy sleep cycle feature to it, go for it, but at least leave us a setting to disable it. I remember there being a "far from equator" option somewhere in the settings in an older version, but that's gone too. Not sure what it would've done, since I just want f.lux to follow the sun like it used to by default, but it's gone regardless.

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      • TwoCablesT
        TwoCables
        last edited by

        Select "Classic f.lux".

        A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • A
          asdoäåifhasuiloth @TwoCables
          last edited by

          @twocables said in How do I get rid of "earliest wake time"?:

          Select "Classic f.lux".

          Doing that gives me this mess.

          alt text

          What is that even supposed to be?

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          • JohnEdwaJ
            JohnEdwa
            last edited by

            Welcome to the far northern hemisphere.
            Basically, the equation Flux uses breaks down at higher longitudes during the summer as we don't actually have a proper night, as it is split by how far under the horizon the sun actually is from right after it dips under the horizon (Civil Twilight) all the way to Astronomical Twilight at 18 degrees, the point it gets pitch black. In Helsinki the last Astronomical Twilight was May 12th.
            The workaround is to move your location further south.

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            • A
              asdoäåifhasuiloth @JohnEdwa
              last edited by

              @johnedwa I understand that, but what's with the sudden drop even though I have the 60 minute slow change enabled? Or the weird dip during the day?

              Are those simply the result of the whole thing "breaking down" like you said?

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