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Is there a way to tweak the behaviour of the auto-brightness backlight? At the moment it correctly goes up to full brightness in sunlight, but it doesn't go as dim as I would like under artificial light. At home, after dark, under electric light, I can manually turn the screen brightness down to the minimum level, and it's still bright enough - the auto setting is much brighter than that(although clearly much dimmer than it is in sunlight, so it is doing something).
Can this be tweaked? Failing that, is there an easier way to control the brightness manually - something I can keep running all the time, and which doesn't require the stylus to change the setting?
Try GLight
http://www.ageye.de/index.php?s=glight/about
JustBored said:
Try GLight
http://www.ageye.de/index.php?s=glight/about
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Thanks, I'll give that a try.
I find Lumos to be more stable and reliable
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=450318
Ok I havn't tried either of them before but I just installed G-Light.
After a bit of config. it's ok. You need to give each backlight number a wider setting.
Otherwise it'll just flip back and forward in brightness.
So far G-Light is proving rather dissapointing. The phone's built-in "Auto" setting works well, apart from the fact that the brightness doesn't go low enough in dim light - in particular, it manages to choose a good level and then stick to it. G-Light, by contrast, keeps changing the brightness up and down all the time.
I think the notion of having absolute brightness bands may be the wrong way to go. You really want a set-up where the threshold values are in different places depending on whether the light is getting brighter or dimmer. So, as the light fades, you cross a threshold and dim the screen - but when the light goes slightly back up over that threshold, you don't brighten the screen again until it gets significantly higher than that. That way, regardless of the light level, the screen brightness will be steady unless the ambient light level is changing a lot. If you use single threshold values then whenever the ambient light happens to be very close to a threshold value you will always get the brightness going constantly up and down.
Edit: some of the things Lumos does (like averaging across multiple readings) sound hopeful, though. I'll give that a try.
Shasarak said:
So far G-Light is proving rather dissapointing. The phone's built-in "Auto" setting works well, apart from the fact that the brightness doesn't go low enough in dim light - in particular, it manages to choose a good level and then stick to it. G-Light, by contrast, keeps changing the brightness up and down all the time.
I think the notion of having absolute brightness bands may be the wrong way to go. You really want a set-up where the threshold values are in different places depending on whether the light is getting brighter or dimmer. So, as the light fades, you cross a threshold and dim the screen - but when the light goes slightly back up over that threshold, you don't brighten the screen again until it gets significantly higher than that. That way, regardless of the light level, the screen brightness will be steady unless the ambient light level is changing a lot. If you use single threshold values then whenever the ambient light happens to be very close to a threshold value you will always get the brightness going constantly up and down.
Edit: some of the things Lumos does (like averaging across multiple readings) sound hopeful, though. I'll give that a try.
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Let me know how Lumos is.
Yes as I said earlier you need to widen those settings.
For now I have 5 set to 0-81
6 set to 82-200
8 set to 201-600
10 set to 601-1000
All the rest are disabled by setting the values to -1 to -1
HeavyComponent said:
Let me know how Lumos is.
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Lumos is also proving dissapointing. It's partly the fault of the hardware - the sensor seems to read 0 even in surprisingly bright light, so the app has no way of telling whether you're at a light level where backlight 1 is appropriate or a light level where backlight 3 is appropriate - both read 0 on the sensor. (This is probably why the default auto option doesn't go below 3 in the first place).
As for Lumos, the author needs to realise that perception of brightness is actually based on an exponential curve. That means that all of the values between level 1 and level 5 are somewhere between 0 and 80 sensor reading. The graph interface is useless for editing custom values with that level of precision - it's trying to squeeze over 2000 values into less than 800 pixels of screen space, and the pixels are tiny! I think you can edit the values directly in the settings.txt file, but that's fiddly - there should be spinboxes, really (as with G-Light).
In any case, you don't want to be editing the values directly! What you want to be doing is taking the phone out of your pocket, looking at it, and thinking "hmm, the screen is too bright at the moment" then adjusting the brightness to whatever level is comfortable for the current ambient light level. The programme should then interpolate the curve that you want, and progressively refine it each time you decide it isn't quite right and tweak the brightness.
I haven't tried to Lumos program yet, but I've been using Glight for a few days. At first I had some issues with it but then I realized that you have to turn the auto light adjustment off in settings first. If not, they'll both be fighting against one another.
Also, you have to set your thresholds pretty carefully as has been already stated. Mine is set to go bright only in bright outside and lowest in a dark room with no light at all.
1 0 to 5
3 10 to 799
8 800 to 2500
I've got mine set low for better battery life and the screen is always readable to me no matter what anyway.
Also, if you're using a the snap on rubber protector (I got a T-Mobile one) it will interfere with the light sensor. I just got one and the lighting is all over the place now. Time to order a full body screen protector.
GLight doesn't seem to work for me. keeps crashing, and the settings don't seem to save at all.
I don't want a sliding scale that Lumos has since i don't think the light sensor is all that accurate (sometimes thinks it's too bright and sometimes thinks its too dark). would rather just have a few settings (pitch black setting, super bright setting, and in the middle) as shawndh suggested.
i have the verizon tp2 - not sure if this might be causing some of the glight probs.
Hello all,
I'm just curious as to how this feature is supposed to work. I have my device set to automatically adjust while it's on medium brightness and I've noticed that the brightness jumps from low to medium frequently, especially when I'm on just one page.
manny84 said:
Hello all,
I'm just curious as to how this feature is supposed to work. I have my device set to automatically adjust while it's on medium brightness and I've noticed that the brightness jumps from low to medium frequently, especially when I'm on just one page.
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I believe it just counts the number of white pixels on the screen on the omnia. this is why it jumps so much. The only way to prevent the jumping is to set the birghtness on low, with the auto setting off. Even on medium or high it jumps when the page has a certain % of white pixels. Like for opening the browser its really annoying however on low brightness the colours are really nice and its just perfect for me. Its just too bright on med or high brightness for my preferences.
But the way how the "feature" itself work I have no clue. Maybe a light sensor. But the jumpiness is caused by the number of white pixels on the amoled screens, and occurs only on samsung devices I believe.
Marvin_S said:
I believe it just counts the number of white pixels on the screen on the omnia. this is why it jumps so much. The only way to prevent the jumping is to set the birghtness on low, with the auto setting off. Even on medium or high it jumps when the page has a certain % of white pixels. Like for opening the browser its really annoying however on low brightness the colours are really nice and its just perfect for me. Its just too bright on med or high brightness for my preferences.
But the way how the "feature" itself work I have no clue. Maybe a light sensor. But the jumpiness is caused by the number of white pixels on the amoled screens, and occurs only on samsung devices I believe.
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Thanks for that explanation, Marvin
So the Lumia 900 dims the screen based on white pixel percentage (for battery) like the Focus and Focus S. Is there an extra settings option to disable this like on the Focus S?
What I'm asking is if there is an 'Extra Settings' category in the settings menu with a field called auto display intensity (like on the Focus S). Thanks.
I'm not seeing it. Today starts my 30-day trial to see if it can pull me away from my investment into Android and my HTC Desire..
I think you can just turn off the Auto brightness. There are no other display settings like on the Samsung WP7's
Sent from my Lumia 900 using XDA Windows Phone 7 App
Yeah, the screen looks a little dim on the auto setting. Someone said that is the way AMOLED screens are. When you disable the auto and change the setting to high, it looks great. I just wonder what the effect on the battery life will be.
I recommend disabling auto-brightness and setting to medium. I personally use low indoors and medium outside. Auto-brightness should be off to save power.
The original poster is correct. Even on Bright with auto turned off, the message area is grey'ish, but white everywhere else seems fine. I went and tested it with the Focus Flash, and it had the same behavior, except when you turn off the "auto display intensity" (or words to that effect) it goes white. I think the Nokia has the exact same behavior, except that we don't have a control to turn it off. I'm keeping my screen on bright to alleviate this, and I know it's hurting the battery to do so.
Seed 2.0 said:
I recommend disabling auto-brightness and setting to medium. I personally use low indoors and medium outside. Auto-brightness should be off to save power.
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Auto brightness = dims based only on the ambient light sensor. Auto display intensity = dims based on % of white pixels on the screen.
drleospaceman said:
Auto brightness = dims based only on the ambient light sensor. Auto display intensity = dims based on % of white pixels on the screen.
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Do you know of a way to switch the Auto Display Intensity?
Is there a fix to this? I got my Lumia today and when I opened the browser and loaded Google it seemed very dim. Even if you change the background of the phone to white instead of black, it looks almost grey and dimmer than some of the other whites on the phone. Is it a bug? Should I replace the phone for another one, or are they all like this?
unity04 said:
Is there a fix to this? I got my Lumia today and when I opened the browser and loaded Google it seemed very dim. Even if you change the background of the phone to white instead of black, it looks almost grey and dimmer than some of the other whites on the phone. Is it a bug? Should I replace the phone for another one, or are they all like this?
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"Feature" not a bug. Samsung presumably provides Nokia the AMOLED panel which has it programmed into the firmware. Samsung modified WP7 on the Focus S to let you disable it.
I've seen a couple posts about delays with adaptive brightness, but this is a different item. I'm seeing that the adaptive brightness alters the brightness a little too dramatically. In a somewhat dark room (not pitch black) the brightness will be at absolute minimum even when the brightness is about 1/3 up on the slider. In a moderately bright room that same brightness setting will be near maximum.
Does anyone else notice this as an issue? I'm just wondering if it's normal (ie, software calibration issue) or if the brightness sensor might not be seated correctly.
It's normal. Or at least it sounds like it is working the same way mine is. And yes, IMO it is a little too sensitive. The Lux app works beautifully if you want an alternative. Also, the goog is known for tweaking this feature over time with updates.
I've noticed this too. The biggest thing for me is walking down the street at dusk (so not dark out yet) I can't read the screen as it turns it all the way down, then, when I walk under a street light, it turns it all the way up to full! It's one extreme or the other, there seems to be no middle ground.
In other words "adaptive brightness has mind of its own!"
This is why I have always kept this setting off. The brightness just changing on its own always annoyed me.
When it works properly (and it should) for ones uses, it's great, it's automatic, what's not to like? It's a pita to always have to change brightness manually just to see a phone display depending on ambient lighting which varies immensely for many users.
jbdan said:
When it works properly (and it should) for ones uses, it's great, it's automatic, what's not to like? It's a pita to always have to change brightness manually just to see a phone display depending on ambient lighting which varies immensely for many users.
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I agree. I have it set to maybe around 15-20% (centered over the WiFi symbol below it) and I never need to touch it. Gets dark enough for night driving and bright enough to read outside. Never found it stuck on one or the other when it shouldn't be.
Sent from my Nexus 5X using Tapatalk
If you buy the app Lux you can customize how it adapts your brightness. The free version is good to but you have to use mostly default settings. By default it only adapts brightness when the screen turns on.
This is my first AMOLED screen phone and something I think I may be noticing that maybe you guys can help confirm or deny about AMOLEDs vs LCDs, is that at night when turning the brightness down (way down, like -50 in the Lux Dash app as an example) results in getting the screen to a point where not bright enough to hurt your eyes at all but the blacks are too dark. So there's no real ideal brightness setting in a dark room that equals no eye pain but still allows you to able to see everything on the screen. Or are my eyes just too sensitive and most other people don't need to turn it down as much as I do and therefore don't have this problem?
You tried night mode
Lux is garbage. Factory adaptive brightness and still being able to use the brightness slider to allow on-the-fly adjustments is far superior - it works perfectly on this phone. And in a pitch black room, with adaptive brightness, setting the slider from 0-25% results in an extremely dim screen (1-2 nits) will information still perfectly viewable. Blacks may have uniformity issues, but that is the nature of OLED panels since it is extremely hard to control voltage at near-black levels when the brightness is extremely low.
s1dest3pnate said:
This is my first AMOLED screen phone and something I think I may be noticing that maybe you guys can help confirm or deny about AMOLEDs vs LCDs, is that at night when turning the brightness down (way down, like -50 in the Lux Dash app as an example) results in getting the screen to a point where not bright enough to hurt your eyes at all but the blacks are too dark. So there's no real ideal brightness setting in a dark room that equals no eye pain but still allows you to able to see everything on the screen. Or are my eyes just too sensitive and most other people don't need to turn it down as much as I do and therefore don't have this problem?
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Amoled displays, when used with automatic brightness adjustment, have a small problem - when you are viewing them in the dark, they appear too dark. Their contrast ratio is infinity, which means that dark colors are basically zero luminosity or close to zero. A lot of internet imagery is calibrated for lcd displays, so when you lower your phone brightness to make the brightest parts viewable on an amoled display, the dark colors become too dark and blend together. This is especially true when you are viewing a screen in a dark environment. There's nothing you can do but increase device brightness by hand when you are using automatic brightness adjustment and viewing in the dark,
---------- Post added at 08:19 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:07 AM ----------
Nitemare3219 said:
Lux is garbage. Factory adaptive brightness and still being able to use the brightness slider to allow on-the-fly adjustments is far superior - it works perfectly on this phone. And in a pitch black room, with adaptive brightness, setting the slider from 0-25% results in an extremely dim screen (1-2 nits) will information still perfectly viewable. Blacks may have uniformity issues, but that is the nature of OLED panels since it is extremely hard to control voltage at near-black levels when the brightness is extremely low.
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You do realize that Adaptive Brightness simply changes the brightness of the screen in response to the light sensor reading?
In other words, the phone doesn't care about your preference - it will change the brightness to preset levels.
On Samsung phones, this situation is far more intelligent. The phone still uses the light sensor to adjust the brightness, but the phone also applies a user preset to augment the brightness - when you slide the brightness slider up, the phone will make auto brightness adjustment higher, and vise versa.
nabbed said:
You do realize that Adaptive Brightness simply changes the brightness of the screen in response to the light sensor reading?
In other words, the phone doesn't care about your preference - it will change the brightness to preset levels.
On Samsung phones, this situation is far more intelligent. The phone still uses the light sensor to adjust the brightness, but the phone also applies a user preset to augment the brightness - when you slide the brightness slider up, the phone will make auto brightness adjustment higher, and vise versa.
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WHAT? You have it totally backwards. Stock Android, including the Pixel, uses user input to augment the auto light sensor brightness when adaptive brightness is enabled. If my phone thinks 50% brightness is appropriate, but my slider is set to 100, it will choose something like 75% brightness instead. If I drop the slider to 0% in the same instance, it might choose 25% instead. The user preference will ALWAYS be impacting auto brightness.
Samsung phones, unless it changed with Nougat, rely strictly on what the phone thinks is best for auto brightness. The user can adjust the slider with auto brightness on, but the slider is a direct adjustment 0-100% of the true brightness level, and the slider will change automatically when there is a large shift in ambient light after the display has been turned off at least once. User preference does NOT impact auto brightness unless you set it at that specific moment.
Nitemare3219 said:
WHAT? You have it totally backwards. Stock Android, including the Pixel, uses user input to augment the auto light sensor brightness when adaptive brightness is enabled. If my phone thinks 50% brightness is appropriate, but my slider is set to 100, it will choose something like 75% brightness instead. If I drop the slider to 0% in the same instance, it might choose 25% instead. The user preference will ALWAYS be impacting auto brightness.
Samsung phones, unless it changed with Nougat, rely strictly on what the phone thinks is best for auto brightness. The user can adjust the slider with auto brightness on, but the slider is a direct adjustment 0-100% of the true brightness level, and the slider will change automatically when there is a large shift in ambient light after the display has been turned off at least once. User preference does NOT impact auto brightness unless you set it at that specific moment.
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Girl, are you kidding me? I just returned a Note 7 for Pixel XL. What were your phones?
nabbed said:
Amoled displays, when used with automatic brightness adjustment, have a small problem - when you are viewing them in the dark, they appear too dark. Their contrast ratio is infinity, which means that dark colors are basically zero luminosity or close to zero. A lot of internet imagery is calibrated for lcd displays, so when you lower your phone brightness to make the brightest parts viewable on an amoled display, the dark colors become too dark and blend together. This is especially true when you are viewing a screen in a dark environment. There's nothing you can do but increase device brightness by hand when you are using automatic brightness adjustment and viewing in the dark,
---------- Post added at 08:19 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:07 AM ----------
You do realize that Adaptive Brightness simply changes the brightness of the screen in response to the light sensor reading?
In other words, the phone doesn't care about your preference - it will change the brightness to preset levels.
On Samsung phones, this situation is far more intelligent. The phone still uses the light sensor to adjust the brightness, but the phone also applies a user preset to augment the brightness - when you slide the brightness slider up, the phone will make auto brightness adjustment higher, and vise versa.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
nabbed said:
Girl, are you kidding me? I just returned a Note 7 for Pixel XL. What were your phones?
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I have a Note7, Pixel XL, and LG V20. Google how adaptive brightness works. There won't be a single article that matches how you say it works.
Nitemare3219 said:
I have a Note7, Pixel XL, and LG V20. Google how adaptive brightness works. There won't be a single article that matches how you say it works.
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Give me evidence. I don't care what your hypothetical "articles" say, I had the actual phones and played with their brightness settings.
nabbed said:
Give me evidence. I don't care what your hypothetical "articles" say, I had the actual phones and played with their brightness settings.
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If you seriously can't tell how adaptive brightness works just by using it as compared to Samsung and LG, I don't know what to tell you. It's pretty damn obvious. If I'm the kind of person who prefers a bright screen, I can set adaptive brightness to 100% and it will always be bright, but stay relative to the ambient lighting. If it's a dim room, the screen will be bright, but nowhere near 100% manual brightness. It only hits 100% manual brightness when under bright light like the sun.
Samsung's auto brightness is still very cookie cutter. If you put 2 Samsung phones side by side with auto brightness on, they will always be the same no matter the ambient light. If I take 2 Pixels, both set to adaptive, and put one on 25% and one in 75%, they will always maintain a brightness difference even when ambient light changes. Samsung phones do not maintain user preferences once the ambient light level changes. I almost never have to adjust my Pixel. I always have to adjust my Note7 because I prefer a slightly brighter screen.
Nitemare3219 said:
If you seriously can't tell how adaptive brightness works just by using it as compared to Samsung and LG, I don't know what to tell you. It's pretty damn obvious. If I'm the kind of person who prefers a bright screen, I can set adaptive brightness to 100% and it will always be bright, but stay relative to the ambient lighting. If it's a dim room, the screen will be bright, but nowhere near 100% manual brightness. It only hits 100% manual brightness when under bright light like the sun.
Samsung's auto brightness is still very cookie cutter. If you put 2 Samsung phones side by side with auto brightness on, they will always be the same no matter the ambient light. If I take 2 Pixels, both set to adaptive, and put one on 25% and one in 75%, they will always maintain a brightness difference even when ambient light changes. Samsung phones do not maintain user preferences once the ambient light level changes. I almost never have to adjust my Pixel. I always have to adjust my Note7 because I prefer a slightly brighter screen.
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What you are saying is EXACTLY THE OPPOSITE of my experience with Note 7 and Pixel XL. I NEVER had to adjust my Note 7 brightness once I set it.
I find myself constantly adjusting Pixel XL brightness setting.
Maybe they both have "adaptive brightness", but the Note 7 version was perfect, and the Pixel XL is just sh`1rt.
nabbed said:
What you are saying is EXACTLY THE OPPOSITE of my experience with Note 7 and Pixel XL. I NEVER had to adjust my Note 7 brightness once I set it.
I find myself constantly adjusting Pixel XL brightness setting.
Maybe they both have "adaptive brightness", but the Note 7 version was perfect, and the Pixel XL is just sh`1rt.
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Click to collapse
Or maybe you two just have differing opinions on what a "perfect" brightness setting is...
Doesn't matter how you adjust your brightness. I'm just saying that when brightness is low, blacks are darker and disproportionate to other colors.
I love Lux especially with it's profiles. Much better control and accuracy than adaptive brightness. I just wish Lux had an auto-profile switcher based on time of day. I have a day profile, night profile, and car profile.
One thing to note is that Lux allows me to bring the darkness down below 0% to negative values, which is where I usually notice my concerns. But that's what I need to not hurt my eyes at night. So I don't blame the phone or anything - just posted this article out of curiosity. The blacks are probably just turning off completely at some point when I bring the value to below 0% which I think makes sense based on the nature of OLED.
You should just turn on night mode to help with eye strain. If 0% brightness is too bright I don't think you will ever get lux to work the way you want, but night mode helps my eyes a lot.
Pixel XL adaptive brightness adapts to what you set the brightness to. If you go from 0 to 100 in a totally dark room, you notice how the screen stays really bright and doesn't go back to 0 on Pix
Many phones use auto brightness to fullly determine brightness based on sensor and ignores user brightness. If you go from 0 to 100 with an auto brightness phone, the phone will go back to 0.
Some prefer one over the other.