Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Linux hurts eyes. What to do?
Hello!
I recently switched to Linux and started using Manjaro as my main system. Before that, it worked only on Windows, and on a variety of versions. Over time, I begin to notice that the picture on Linux is significantly different from Windows. It seems that the colors on Windows are soft and organic, and on Linux they are too bright and colorful, high contrast. To be honest, it’s hard to convey what the problem is, but I noticed that Linux’s eyes get tired many times faster, although at first glance the difference is not visible. I can't figure out what the problem is and how to fix it.
The video card is integrated, I did not install drivers, and I don’t know how to do it on Linux. I tried to play around with the contrast and saturation sliders, but did not solve the problem.
Does anyone know how to fix this? Maybe there are some programs-light filters?
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
in the terminal man xrandr,
well, or in the Googledex "xrandr+brightness+contrast",
depending on which card, you can also put proprietary firewood,
there is a junk to correct the gamma / contrast, etc.
Decrease brightness, increase contrast. On Windows, the fonts are soapy, which really hurts the eyes - there are confirmed statistics and class actions.
Do you use the Pomodoro timer? Do you look at the monitor no more than 8 hours a day?
Iron manufacturers are too lazy to optimize drivers for linux. Vitualbox on win host will help.
Firewood on the video, if any, so that the settings appear, and there already twist and adjust.
As an option, if you don’t feel sorry for the money, buying a video card, albeit not expensive, with an nvidia chip, how to put a driver on it will not be difficult.
KDE has a "Night Color Scheme" system customization module. You can set the color temperature there. If not KDE, then put RedShift, if I don’t confuse the name.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question