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Daily Mac App: Sunset

Sunset brightness adjuster

Sometimes your screen is just too bright in the evenings. For the sake of your eyes, Sunset lets you reduce the brightness of your monitor below that of the standard brightness controls and without having to adjust the backlight.

If you reduce the brightness of your screen using the on-board controls, what you're doing is reducing the brightness of the backlight bulbs or LEDs behind the screen. Sometimes that can cause buzzing, or other droning noises, and sometimes that just isn't dim enough. Sunset takes a different approach purely in software that overlays a dimming mask over your screen with different levels to suit your brightness needs.

This means that if your display makes an annoying sound when dimmed, or you just can't get it dim enough, Sunset will dim your display to your satisfaction without issue. Sure, dimming your display with Sunset doesn't affect electricity usage or the life of your backlight, but it will save your eyes at night.

The little program sits in the menu bar and can be configured to respond to global shortcut keys like F1 & F2. If you have more than one display, Sunset can dim all of them to the same level or you can pick and choose which one to dim independently. The only thing missing is some sort of auto-dimming set to a specific timer, but the manual control works well.

Sunset is great if your lowest monitor's brightness setting is just too bright, or it makes an annoying sound when not on full brightness. It's simple, easy to use and gets the job done for an introductory price of US$1.99 (regular price $3.99).



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Software Mac

Sometimes your screen is just too bright in the evenings. For the sake of your eyes, Sunset lets you reduce the brightness of your...
 

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14 Comments

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teelyn1037

I need an app that will let me increase the VOLUME beyond the system's standard controls. Now that I would pay for!!!! Anyone know of something that will do this???

September 01 2011 at 4:53 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to teelyn1037's comment
Jenny

try boom (:
http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/36700/boom

September 03 2011 at 2:06 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
Mystakill

SBSettings is available for those of you with jailbroken iDevices. It has a brightness slider, which you can access quickly & easily by swiping the status bar at the top of the display, and then clicking the brightness icon.

http://cydia.saurik.com/package/sbsettings

August 19 2011 at 10:19 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Mystakill's comment
Dr. Sam Gibbs

It just adjusts the backlight using the same range as what is available in the Settings app. It will not change the minimum brightness available unfortunately.

August 20 2011 at 7:08 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Justin

I assume this is mainly for people that use external displays? Adjusting the backlight only 2010 13" MBP allows me 16 different steps of brightness ranging in fairly even increments between super bright and off.

August 18 2011 at 6:52 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
isnoop

I use an app called shades to do this. Love this functionality. As an added bonus, I believe shades is free.

August 18 2011 at 6:06 PM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to isnoop's comment
donvy

I use Shades too, and yes, it is indeed free at http://www.charcoaldesign.co.uk/shades. Usually the iMacs are notorious for being overly bright, not the laptops.

August 18 2011 at 8:27 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
iThinkergoiMac

This will also make your colors look horrendous! I've tried F.lux and it was awful. Did exactly what it claimed to do, but I couldn't stand the alteration of colors.

August 18 2011 at 5:51 PM Report abuse +2 rate up rate down Reply
daenney

Personally this is nothing new and F.lux has a much better approach to it, warming the colors of the LCD instead. This causes a lot less strain on your eyes, dimming the screen beyond its "capabilities" is only going to strain your eyes more.

August 18 2011 at 4:49 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Eleventeen

Or you can use F.lux which is free and also warms your screen colors so you don't get too much harsh cool blues at night also.

August 18 2011 at 3:30 PM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to Eleventeen's comment
Dr. Sam Gibbs

Yeah I've tried warmers before and didn't like the change in color. But wil check it out, thanks for the suggestion.

August 18 2011 at 3:41 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Steve R.

I use Flux, too, and really like it. Does anyone know of something similar for the iPad/iPhone? Even at the lowest level, the iPad screen is pretty bright at night. I'd love to be able to dim/warm the iPad screen.

August 18 2011 at 4:22 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to Steve R.'s comment
Dr. Sam Gibbs

I've been looking but I'm afraid it's just not going to be possible without jailbreaking as it's not something Apple is going to let you control. You can apply a dimmer sticker to the screen of course, but I don't think it would be all that great on the iPad.

August 18 2011 at 6:39 PM Report abuse rate up rate down
Steve R.

I thought that might be the case... a while back when I had my iPhone jailbroken, I was looking for a Flux-like app on cydia, but couldn't even find one there. Oh well... and jailbreaking my iPad and writing my own app to do this is beyond my hacking skills.

August 19 2011 at 12:44 AM Report abuse rate up rate down
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