Color effects/Reduce Eyestrain
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 Thanks for explanation. 
 I tried it, and I like it, but I was wondering what was going on under the hood. That helps.
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 It looks very similar to 5500 K ("Sunlight") filter on my monitor. Would love to hear from the developer what exactly this filter does. 
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 I wonder if an "outdoors mode" would be available soon as well. :| 
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 @scoenta said in Color effects/Reduce Eyestrain: I wonder if an "outdoors mode" would be available soon as well. :| What would it do? If you are talking about when a display is hard to see due to how bright it can be outside, that's a problem that can only be solved by a display that has a much brighter backlight (but I doubt any kind of a display would be bright enough outside, except for special monitors that can get extremely bright). F.lux can't help with that. 
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 @scoenta said in Color effects/Reduce Eyestrain: I wonder if an "outdoors mode" would be available soon as well. :| Like @TwoCables asked, I am wondering what you mean by that. 
 f.lux v4 supports increasing the color temperature above 6500 K as well, which results in a bluish-sort of display. I suppose that can be handy for certain outside light conditions...
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 Before F.lux, I tested Sunset-Screen 1.26 for a long while, and it has three options for outdoor mode, with "partly cloudy sky", "cloudy sky" and "deep blue clear sky". :/ 
 However F.lux is more complete for my needs, so I prefer to use F.lux for now. :) 
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 @scoenta Yes, f.lux v4 can do this as well. It goes up to 9300K and besides that you have several color filters to choose from. I have no idea how 20.000 K looks but I can only imagine it's an outright blue filter, which f.lux offers as well. 
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 Oh thank you! By the way, this is the Youtube video about F.lux that makes me to use it. :) 
 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Xj7XDT6UNk
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 But those settings are to simulate the colors. They are not saying, "This is for use outside on a cloudy day". Y'know? It's saying, "This is to simulate the color you see outside on a cloudy day" (or whatever the preset's name may be that you like). There's no need to use f.lux when you're using a computer or tablet or other compatible mobile device outside. 
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 F.lux v4 has a range of 800K to 100,000K. Use Alt+Shit+Page Down and Up. 
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 Thank you too for your good explanation! :) 
 Edit (1): SunsetScreen has a range of 500K to 9,854,736K (that means pure red and pure blue with no inverted colours at all).
 Edit (2): anyway, a range of 800K to 100,000K should be enough for average required tasks or average computer environment.
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 Thank you :rosette: :rosette: :rosette: 
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 Thank you for the advice! :) 
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 @TwoCables said in Color effects/Reduce Eyestrain: F.lux v4 has a range of 800K to 100,000K. Use Alt+Shit+Page Down and Up. Whoa, I knew about the shortcut, and going down more orange, but hadn't considered how blue I could go! Thanks for that, I'm now at 50,000K very nice tint. @f-lux-team Bug or limitation, I have two GPUs (one low power and another higher speed) with each a monitor connected. When I use the shortcut, it doesn't seem to be affecting the other GPU or the other monitor, however you'd like to think about it. Is this a difficult configuration to work with? I understand the program changes the color tables for A GPU, but what about more than one?I'm completely mistaken, it is pushed to both monitors, whoops. The blue is just not very pronounced as I thought it would be, maybe I'll kick up the saturation. 


