Why controlling total luminance is a better bet
Why controlling total luminance is a better bet
Even if they don’t work they still feel a lot easier on the eyes
For anybody with a trained pattern recognition like me who spots “neuroai” in the url and then the fat “the premise” and immediatly jumps to conclusions: This doesnt seem to be an ai slop article.
Still didnt read it because its a lot of science mumbo jumbo describing a (non)feature i dont use anyway. lmao
Personally I just like the orange tint as it makes work feel ever so slightly like playing New Vegas :3
This was an interesting read, but it’s only discussing blue light filters as they affect melatonin and thus sleep cycle. It doesn’t say anything about other reasons to use them, which for me are:
Given this the article title seems sliiiightly grandiose, but maybe most people are really only in it for the melatonin thing.
I’m in the same camp. The supposed blue light/sleep correlation was briefly in the news about 10-15 years ago, and even then it felt like it was as much woo-woo “science” as the paleo diet. Since then, pretty much any blue light study I’ve read has been focused on risks to our vision. My ophthalmologist has been recommending blue light filters for my glasses for a few years now, and I can confidently say that they’ve helped a lot with screen fatigue. But that’s a physical filter, not a display color filter. For those, in my opinion the main reason to use one is because you like the color gradient better.
Whether it works or not, warmer colors are easier to look at. I have literally all my devices shifted to warmer colors, always–not just at nighttime.
An interesting article, but citing Scott Alexander at the end has me concerned.