I really wish there was something like f.lux (http://stereopsis.com/flux/) for iOS, or at least without having to jailbreak and do whatever else, because then I might be able to use my iPad in bed to read a bit before sleeping.
Having it on my laptop had made a big difference -- I "felt tired" when the display temperature was adjusted at nighttime. Before that, I could happily stare at that blue light and stay awake as long as I wanted, at the expense of my productivity the next day.
There's a lot of other tweaks which make iOS a much nicer place. More recently, Nitrous is a pretty amazing tweak which enables the Nitro JS engine for non-Safari apps. Speeds things up big time.
Aside from that you can have a way of having a particular browser open besides Safari, scrobble your iTunes tracks automatically, password protect apps, have a much better lockscreen experience, much better folder experience, theming, retina-fy low res apps, have a download manager, etc.
For me personally, there's plenty of reasons to jailbreak.
What's the quickest, easiest way to jailbreak a 4S today? I've never done it and now I'm curious. And, how hard is it go restore back to pre-jailbreak status?
The current version of iOS is easily jailbroken and f.lux is a free package, available right from cydia without any detours. It's not as smooth as a built-in solution would've been, but much better than I ever expected.
I personally switched back from my nexus 7 to my galaxy nexus for night time reading just for this reason. It's not just the size, the darker blacks of the oled screen also help.
It also helps that the size of the phone is better for novel reading, in my opinion. It's worse for practically everything else, but the ability to fall asleep quicker more than makes up for it.
The Mac app isn't great. It works, but eats ~0.2 CPU on idle. Nocturne is better: it sets the gamma LUT to tint the screen and nothing else, but you have to switch between Day and Night mode manually.
Lux isn't as nice as the others because it doesn't change colour temperature, it just puts a red/brown overlay over the screen. AFAIK there's no way to change the screen's colour temperature in Android.
I was literally looking for flux on linux just before coming to HN to read this, so i can tell you flux is available for linux[1], although there can be issues; which prompted the creation of redshift.
I use the lowest brightness setting for the iPad, doesn't mess up too much with my sleep that way. But I'm still thinking about getting a Kindle for that reason.
Does anyone know of an extension for firefox (or chrome) that replaces white backgrounds (or even better all light colours) with darker shades?
Flux and co are all well and good, but large areas of white (even when orange-ish) are still a strain, and it seems fairly simple issue to solve (at least in the most simple case; replace #ffffff backgrounds).
Also as a tip for anyone with a windows laptop; you may find, like me, that linux allows your screen to be set much darker than the sparse intervals in windows allow (maybe there is a windows program that allows fine brightness setting?). Macbooks seem to have a very low brigtness setting, although i can't say i've used one in the dark.
The article just says "electronics with backlit displays". I'm surprised it singles out tablets, because unless I'm reading it wrong, that includes laptops, or even television sets. Strikes me as untrue, since almost everybody has these and stares at them all day and not everybody has sleeping problems.
Sleeping problems is a pretty extreme case. If the tablet or laptop pushes your sleep time back to midnight from 10 PM, that could be a large and significant effect even if one doesn't consider it 'a problem'.
(In some groups, this might be a problem, and the paper specifically mentions them: adolescents already have a sleep schedule that has been pushed back by puberty, love their gadgets, and have hard and early wake-up times. The result: highschoolers spend the first few classes half-asleep.)
I have found turning my brightness all of the way down (more accessible by double clicking the home button), and turning on white on black text in Settings > Acessibility helps. It inverts the color palatte but produces less light so it's easier to read in the dark.
Most nights (and when I nap in the afternoon) for the past couple years, I use an iPad to read websites and Instapaper saves for 15-30 minutes in bed before I go to sleep. After that ~15 minutes, I'm out like a light. I've never previously been able to get to sleep as quickly, reliably, and easily.
Sample size of one and all, but I definitely haven't noticed any negative impact on my sleep. If anything, I'm fairly confident that my newly-backlit reading habits have actually helped me get more sleep.
I don't get it or is it just me? I never have this problem and I think our society keeps inventing all these gadgets and pills to solve problems that are not really problems.
What I do is invert the colors on the iPad at night and turn the brightness all the way down. The screen on/screen off button can be programmed to be the trigger. When I press it 3 times quickly it inverts the colors. No need to jailbreak for this hack.
The sample size for this study is 13 people. I can't take it seriously. In any case, I play Asphalt7 on my iPad in bed before sleeping and haven't noticed too many problems.
> The sample size for this study is 13 people. I can't take it seriously.
Why can't you take it seriously? Whether or not 13 is a sufficient sample size depends on factors that were not given in the article, so I don't see how you can so easily dismiss it out of hand.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 109 ms ] threadHaving it on my laptop had made a big difference -- I "felt tired" when the display temperature was adjusted at nighttime. Before that, I could happily stare at that blue light and stay awake as long as I wanted, at the expense of my productivity the next day.
Aside from that you can have a way of having a particular browser open besides Safari, scrobble your iTunes tracks automatically, password protect apps, have a much better lockscreen experience, much better folder experience, theming, retina-fy low res apps, have a download manager, etc.
For me personally, there's plenty of reasons to jailbreak.
It also helps that the size of the phone is better for novel reading, in my opinion. It's worse for practically everything else, but the ability to fall asleep quicker more than makes up for it.
If you need darker-than-minimum setting then check out 'screen filter'.
Are you aware of an equivelant for Android?
There are very few downsides to jailbreaking, these days; it's not fair to characterize software that requires a jailbreak negatively for that reason.
1. see http://stereopsis.com/flux/linux.html
Flux and co are all well and good, but large areas of white (even when orange-ish) are still a strain, and it seems fairly simple issue to solve (at least in the most simple case; replace #ffffff backgrounds).
Also as a tip for anyone with a windows laptop; you may find, like me, that linux allows your screen to be set much darker than the sparse intervals in windows allow (maybe there is a windows program that allows fine brightness setting?). Macbooks seem to have a very low brigtness setting, although i can't say i've used one in the dark.
On linux I use the "negative" plugin to compiz, with a keystroke (win+n) the whole window goes negative. Great for reading hacker news at night.
(In some groups, this might be a problem, and the paper specifically mentions them: adolescents already have a sleep schedule that has been pushed back by puberty, love their gadgets, and have hard and early wake-up times. The result: highschoolers spend the first few classes half-asleep.)
Sample size of one and all, but I definitely haven't noticed any negative impact on my sleep. If anything, I'm fairly confident that my newly-backlit reading habits have actually helped me get more sleep.
I've stopped doing that recently, and it does feel liberating, but I still have sleep problems... (Such as waking up every night, sometimes twice.)
[1]http://stereopsis.com/flux/ios.html
I'm still getting used to it on the main desktop monitor, though. Installed, uninstalled, now trying again for a 2nd time.
Why can't you take it seriously? Whether or not 13 is a sufficient sample size depends on factors that were not given in the article, so I don't see how you can so easily dismiss it out of hand.