I really like the Bedtime Mode that Android has as a part of Digital Wellbeing. At a specified time, it will turn the screen grayscale, dim the wallpaper, etc.
Is there an equivalent setting or app for Windows? Bonus points if you know of a Linux equivalent too.
F.lux is a windows app that adjusts screen brightness based on time of day
This right here. I’ve been using f.lux for years and years, more than a decade at this point. You can set it up so it ignores certain apps, specific displays on a multi-display setup, or all fullscreen apps. You can also fully customize the color temperature in addition to if, when, and how it transitions between cool and warm tones.
Can’t recommend it enough. It’s one of the first things I install whenever I get a new computer. I think it might also integrate with some smart home tech, but I don’t touch that crap.
I’m using f.lux right now, it’s great. Set it and forget it, it slowly recolors the screen as you get closer to night. And you can set to to automatically disable itself when you run any program you specify. So if you want to watch a movie, the colors will return to normal when you open the program.
Windows ten has night light mode where it turns the screen yellowish
And it’s buggy as all heck. Frequently fails to turn all monitors yellow (if multi monitor). Frequently fails to turn it off the next morning, forcing you to reboot.
I once had it stuck on red tint for a week no matter what I did.
Search settings for ‘night’, set schedule.
GNOME and KDE both have a built-in nightlight feature (reducing blue light after a certain time). Not seen one that will turn the screen greyscale myself.
Edit- Actually I think I’ve found exactly what you’re asking for: https://fostips.com/gnome-bedtime-androids-bedtime-mode-linux/
Linux has it, KDE offers night light by default.
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there’s a GNOME extension called Bedtime Mode that adds a quick setting to turn the screen grayscale: https://extensions.gnome.org/extension/4012/gnome-bedtime/
For Linux, there is redshift, which works DE unspecific as far as I know.