Flux, Redshift and Night Color don't work (Ubuntu Budgie)
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Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error
budgie
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up vote
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Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error
budgie
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add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error
budgie
New contributor
Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error
budgie
budgie
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New contributor
New contributor
asked Nov 25 at 12:00
user896762
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1 Answer
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up vote
1
down vote
If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct
from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct
to preview what will be installed: -s
provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo
.
If you do decide to try sct
, man sct
has
DESCRIPTION
sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000
OPTIONS
temperature
If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value
-h If -h is passed sct will display usage information
none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500
So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500
for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct
.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct
from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct
to preview what will be installed: -s
provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo
.
If you do decide to try sct
, man sct
has
DESCRIPTION
sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000
OPTIONS
temperature
If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value
-h If -h is passed sct will display usage information
none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500
So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500
for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct
.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct
from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct
to preview what will be installed: -s
provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo
.
If you do decide to try sct
, man sct
has
DESCRIPTION
sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000
OPTIONS
temperature
If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value
-h If -h is passed sct will display usage information
none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500
So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500
for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct
.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct
from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct
to preview what will be installed: -s
provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo
.
If you do decide to try sct
, man sct
has
DESCRIPTION
sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000
OPTIONS
temperature
If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value
-h If -h is passed sct will display usage information
none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500
So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500
for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct
.
If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct
from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct
to preview what will be installed: -s
provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo
.
If you do decide to try sct
, man sct
has
DESCRIPTION
sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000
OPTIONS
temperature
If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value
-h If -h is passed sct will display usage information
none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500
So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500
for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct
.
answered Nov 25 at 15:04
DK Bose
12.3k123983
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