w54y6eryurt
Terrarian
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http://www.bluelightexposed.com/#where-is-blue-light-found
"Our eyes' natural filters do not provide sufficient protection against blue light rays from the sun, let alone the blue light emanating from these devices or from blue light emitted from fluorescent-light tubes. Prolonged exposure to blue light may cause retinal damage and contribute to age-related macular degeneration, which can lead to loss of vision."
Don't you lower the screen brightness at night?My eyes have just lost 'soreness' that they used to have before I was using f.lux
I've been using f.lux ever since it was out for about a month (and that's a long time)
Really, anything after 10 PM would hurt my eyes, now it doesn't anymore.
Don't you lower the screen brightness at night?
There is a simple hotkey for adjusting the brightness of the screen.No, having to go to the settings every damn night is not my kind of jam. f.lux does the work for me now.
There is a simple hotkey for adjusting the brightness of the screen.
The amount of light and it's source in a room are what matter, not time of day.Good, now find a program that lowers "red light" and "orange light" and "green light" and "white light" and "yellow light" and ll those other "kinds" of light which also up your vision at night, and that site conveniently decides to ignore.
Not that I disagree with that practice, it's usual in business. "If you want to sell something, tell your customers what it does, not what it doesn't." Yes, the program is free, but there's ways to make the customer pay a fee. "What the customer doesn't know can't hurt them."
Know what really saves your eyes? Not gaming at night. It's free and 100% certain to not contain hidden malicious software.
Edit: In case you didn't notice, I used "" up there. Just saving you the chore of finding a way to invalidate my post.
Yeah light. Photons? More like pho-tons of overrated trashGood, now find a program that lowers "red light" and "orange light" and "green light" and "white light" and "yellow light" and ll those other "kinds" of light which also up your vision at night, and that site conveniently decides to ignore.
Not that I disagree with that practice, it's usual in business. "If you want to sell something, tell your customers what it does, not what it doesn't." Yes, the program is free, but there's ways to make the customer pay a fee. "What the customer doesn't know can't hurt them."
Know what really saves your eyes? Not gaming at night. It's free and 100% certain to not contain hidden malicious software.
Edit: In case you didn't notice, I used "" up there. Just saving you the chore of finding a way to invalidate my post.