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I want the night light applet from GNOME shell 3.24


Redshift permission error “GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.AccessDenied”Nightlight has stopped working 18.04.1How can I monitor other windows non-intrusively (enable picture-in-picture feature) on GNOME 3?Move clock to center in Gnome Shell 3.24gnome shell system monitor applet not work in Ubuntu 19.04






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty
margin-bottom:0;









1

















I'm a Web Developer, working on my Ubuntu 16.04 and I want to update to Ubuntu 17.04 in order to install new gnome-shell version 3.24 just because I really want that new features such as the night light applet, I've tried using flux app but it doesn't work. I've searched for a working alternative but I didn't have any luck.










share|improve this question























  • 2





    Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

    – Terrance
    Aug 30 '17 at 22:04












  • @Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

    – Wagner Moreira
    Aug 31 '17 at 3:57






  • 1





    Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

    – Terrance
    Aug 31 '17 at 4:13






  • 2





    I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

    – Zanna
    Aug 31 '17 at 12:03


















1

















I'm a Web Developer, working on my Ubuntu 16.04 and I want to update to Ubuntu 17.04 in order to install new gnome-shell version 3.24 just because I really want that new features such as the night light applet, I've tried using flux app but it doesn't work. I've searched for a working alternative but I didn't have any luck.










share|improve this question























  • 2





    Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

    – Terrance
    Aug 30 '17 at 22:04












  • @Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

    – Wagner Moreira
    Aug 31 '17 at 3:57






  • 1





    Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

    – Terrance
    Aug 31 '17 at 4:13






  • 2





    I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

    – Zanna
    Aug 31 '17 at 12:03














1












1








1


0






I'm a Web Developer, working on my Ubuntu 16.04 and I want to update to Ubuntu 17.04 in order to install new gnome-shell version 3.24 just because I really want that new features such as the night light applet, I've tried using flux app but it doesn't work. I've searched for a working alternative but I didn't have any luck.










share|improve this question

















I'm a Web Developer, working on my Ubuntu 16.04 and I want to update to Ubuntu 17.04 in order to install new gnome-shell version 3.24 just because I really want that new features such as the night light applet, I've tried using flux app but it doesn't work. I've searched for a working alternative but I didn't have any luck.







software-recommendation gnome-shell






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 31 '17 at 12:01









Zanna

53.5k15 gold badges150 silver badges251 bronze badges




53.5k15 gold badges150 silver badges251 bronze badges










asked Aug 30 '17 at 20:12









Wagner MoreiraWagner Moreira

1381 silver badge11 bronze badges




1381 silver badge11 bronze badges










  • 2





    Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

    – Terrance
    Aug 30 '17 at 22:04












  • @Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

    – Wagner Moreira
    Aug 31 '17 at 3:57






  • 1





    Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

    – Terrance
    Aug 31 '17 at 4:13






  • 2





    I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

    – Zanna
    Aug 31 '17 at 12:03













  • 2





    Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

    – Terrance
    Aug 30 '17 at 22:04












  • @Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

    – Wagner Moreira
    Aug 31 '17 at 3:57






  • 1





    Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

    – Terrance
    Aug 31 '17 at 4:13






  • 2





    I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

    – Zanna
    Aug 31 '17 at 12:03








2




2





Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

– Terrance
Aug 30 '17 at 22:04






Did you try installing redshift, then using your Latitude & Longitude to set your location? Then use the settings of 6500 for daylight and 3700 for night? The command would look like redshift -l LAT:LONG -t 6500:3700

– Terrance
Aug 30 '17 at 22:04














@Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

– Wagner Moreira
Aug 31 '17 at 3:57





@Terrance please add that as an answer so I can give you more points

– Wagner Moreira
Aug 31 '17 at 3:57




1




1





Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

– Terrance
Aug 31 '17 at 4:13





Glad that it works for you. Added an answer. =)

– Terrance
Aug 31 '17 at 4:13




2




2





I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

– Zanna
Aug 31 '17 at 12:03






I edited the question to ask about your real problem, based on your acceptance of Terrance's answer. Hopefully reviewers will not close it now. Please re-edit if you can clarify or you disagree with my changes.

– Zanna
Aug 31 '17 at 12:03











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















7


















You can install redshift from the following command:



sudo apt install redshift


You can just add redshift to your startup if you are OK with redshift pulling its own default settings. Or, you can configure it manually like I have laid out below.




You can get your Longitude & Latitude from https://www.latlong.net/



You can then create a config file that redshift will use in your home folder at ~/.config/redshift.conf. Add the following lines to it, and I added the lat and lon for Portland, OR. But you can add the ones for your location. Make sure to set location-provider= to manual then if you want to use the LAT and LONG. However, the application geoclue2 should be able to find your location. Change the temp-day and temp-night to your likings.



~/.config/redshift.conf



; Global settings
[redshift]
temp-day=6500K
temp-night=3500
transition=1
gamma=1.000:1.000:1.000
location-provider=geoclue2
adjustment-method=randr

; The location provider and adjustment method settings
; are in their own sections.
; These are the location for Portland, OR.
[manual]
lat=45.523062
lon=-122.676482


Then all you have to do is to add just the application of redshift -c ~/.config/redshift.conf to your startup applications and it will use your config file at startup by default.



You can check your redshift parameters by running redshift -pv or redshift -p:



terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -pv
Location: 45.55 N, 122.68 W
Temperatures: 6500K at day, 3500K at night
Solar elevations: day above 3.0, night below -6.0
Brightness: 1.00:1.00
Gamma (Daytime): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
Gamma (Night): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
Solar elevation: -22.482371
Period: Night
Color temperature: 3500K
Brightness: 1.00



terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -p
Period: Night
Color temperature: 3500K
Brightness: 1.00


Hope this helps!






share|improve this answer




























  • what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

    – Wagner Moreira
    Aug 31 '17 at 4:30











  • You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

    – Terrance
    Aug 31 '17 at 14:48


















0


















A new simple and free software is Iris mini
,all you have to do is open it (as it's in appimage format)






share|improve this answer

































    0


















    If you have more than one monitor then eyesome might work better for you than redshift, nightlight or Windows 10 as it provides separate brightness and gamma (color temperature) for three monitors.



    Instead of Longitude and Latitude you enter your city name and country name, which is usually derived automatically. Sunrise and sunset times are obtained daily for your city. Then over a one to two hour period (more or less) which you define brightness and color temperature is gradually increased after sunrise and decreased before sunset so it unnoticeable.



    Even for adaptive brightness TVs you might prefer turning the feature off cranking up the brightness on the TV and using eyesome to control brightness instead.



    I wrote it and it's all in bash so you can change it for more monitors (than 3) or for Windows 10 or whatever.



    Sample screenshots



    eyesome main menu.png



    eyesome edit.png



    eyesome-edit-configuration-general.png



    eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor1.png



    eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor3.png






    share|improve this answer





























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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      7


















      You can install redshift from the following command:



      sudo apt install redshift


      You can just add redshift to your startup if you are OK with redshift pulling its own default settings. Or, you can configure it manually like I have laid out below.




      You can get your Longitude & Latitude from https://www.latlong.net/



      You can then create a config file that redshift will use in your home folder at ~/.config/redshift.conf. Add the following lines to it, and I added the lat and lon for Portland, OR. But you can add the ones for your location. Make sure to set location-provider= to manual then if you want to use the LAT and LONG. However, the application geoclue2 should be able to find your location. Change the temp-day and temp-night to your likings.



      ~/.config/redshift.conf



      ; Global settings
      [redshift]
      temp-day=6500K
      temp-night=3500
      transition=1
      gamma=1.000:1.000:1.000
      location-provider=geoclue2
      adjustment-method=randr

      ; The location provider and adjustment method settings
      ; are in their own sections.
      ; These are the location for Portland, OR.
      [manual]
      lat=45.523062
      lon=-122.676482


      Then all you have to do is to add just the application of redshift -c ~/.config/redshift.conf to your startup applications and it will use your config file at startup by default.



      You can check your redshift parameters by running redshift -pv or redshift -p:



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -pv
      Location: 45.55 N, 122.68 W
      Temperatures: 6500K at day, 3500K at night
      Solar elevations: day above 3.0, night below -6.0
      Brightness: 1.00:1.00
      Gamma (Daytime): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Gamma (Night): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Solar elevation: -22.482371
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -p
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00


      Hope this helps!






      share|improve this answer




























      • what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

        – Wagner Moreira
        Aug 31 '17 at 4:30











      • You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

        – Terrance
        Aug 31 '17 at 14:48















      7


















      You can install redshift from the following command:



      sudo apt install redshift


      You can just add redshift to your startup if you are OK with redshift pulling its own default settings. Or, you can configure it manually like I have laid out below.




      You can get your Longitude & Latitude from https://www.latlong.net/



      You can then create a config file that redshift will use in your home folder at ~/.config/redshift.conf. Add the following lines to it, and I added the lat and lon for Portland, OR. But you can add the ones for your location. Make sure to set location-provider= to manual then if you want to use the LAT and LONG. However, the application geoclue2 should be able to find your location. Change the temp-day and temp-night to your likings.



      ~/.config/redshift.conf



      ; Global settings
      [redshift]
      temp-day=6500K
      temp-night=3500
      transition=1
      gamma=1.000:1.000:1.000
      location-provider=geoclue2
      adjustment-method=randr

      ; The location provider and adjustment method settings
      ; are in their own sections.
      ; These are the location for Portland, OR.
      [manual]
      lat=45.523062
      lon=-122.676482


      Then all you have to do is to add just the application of redshift -c ~/.config/redshift.conf to your startup applications and it will use your config file at startup by default.



      You can check your redshift parameters by running redshift -pv or redshift -p:



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -pv
      Location: 45.55 N, 122.68 W
      Temperatures: 6500K at day, 3500K at night
      Solar elevations: day above 3.0, night below -6.0
      Brightness: 1.00:1.00
      Gamma (Daytime): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Gamma (Night): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Solar elevation: -22.482371
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -p
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00


      Hope this helps!






      share|improve this answer




























      • what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

        – Wagner Moreira
        Aug 31 '17 at 4:30











      • You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

        – Terrance
        Aug 31 '17 at 14:48













      7














      7










      7









      You can install redshift from the following command:



      sudo apt install redshift


      You can just add redshift to your startup if you are OK with redshift pulling its own default settings. Or, you can configure it manually like I have laid out below.




      You can get your Longitude & Latitude from https://www.latlong.net/



      You can then create a config file that redshift will use in your home folder at ~/.config/redshift.conf. Add the following lines to it, and I added the lat and lon for Portland, OR. But you can add the ones for your location. Make sure to set location-provider= to manual then if you want to use the LAT and LONG. However, the application geoclue2 should be able to find your location. Change the temp-day and temp-night to your likings.



      ~/.config/redshift.conf



      ; Global settings
      [redshift]
      temp-day=6500K
      temp-night=3500
      transition=1
      gamma=1.000:1.000:1.000
      location-provider=geoclue2
      adjustment-method=randr

      ; The location provider and adjustment method settings
      ; are in their own sections.
      ; These are the location for Portland, OR.
      [manual]
      lat=45.523062
      lon=-122.676482


      Then all you have to do is to add just the application of redshift -c ~/.config/redshift.conf to your startup applications and it will use your config file at startup by default.



      You can check your redshift parameters by running redshift -pv or redshift -p:



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -pv
      Location: 45.55 N, 122.68 W
      Temperatures: 6500K at day, 3500K at night
      Solar elevations: day above 3.0, night below -6.0
      Brightness: 1.00:1.00
      Gamma (Daytime): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Gamma (Night): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Solar elevation: -22.482371
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -p
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00


      Hope this helps!






      share|improve this answer
















      You can install redshift from the following command:



      sudo apt install redshift


      You can just add redshift to your startup if you are OK with redshift pulling its own default settings. Or, you can configure it manually like I have laid out below.




      You can get your Longitude & Latitude from https://www.latlong.net/



      You can then create a config file that redshift will use in your home folder at ~/.config/redshift.conf. Add the following lines to it, and I added the lat and lon for Portland, OR. But you can add the ones for your location. Make sure to set location-provider= to manual then if you want to use the LAT and LONG. However, the application geoclue2 should be able to find your location. Change the temp-day and temp-night to your likings.



      ~/.config/redshift.conf



      ; Global settings
      [redshift]
      temp-day=6500K
      temp-night=3500
      transition=1
      gamma=1.000:1.000:1.000
      location-provider=geoclue2
      adjustment-method=randr

      ; The location provider and adjustment method settings
      ; are in their own sections.
      ; These are the location for Portland, OR.
      [manual]
      lat=45.523062
      lon=-122.676482


      Then all you have to do is to add just the application of redshift -c ~/.config/redshift.conf to your startup applications and it will use your config file at startup by default.



      You can check your redshift parameters by running redshift -pv or redshift -p:



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -pv
      Location: 45.55 N, 122.68 W
      Temperatures: 6500K at day, 3500K at night
      Solar elevations: day above 3.0, night below -6.0
      Brightness: 1.00:1.00
      Gamma (Daytime): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Gamma (Night): 1.000, 1.000, 1.000
      Solar elevation: -22.482371
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00



      terrance@terrance-ubuntu:~$ redshift -p
      Period: Night
      Color temperature: 3500K
      Brightness: 1.00


      Hope this helps!







      share|improve this answer















      share|improve this answer




      share|improve this answer








      edited May 29 at 5:20

























      answered Aug 31 '17 at 4:12









      TerranceTerrance

      21.9k3 gold badges53 silver badges105 bronze badges




      21.9k3 gold badges53 silver badges105 bronze badges















      • what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

        – Wagner Moreira
        Aug 31 '17 at 4:30











      • You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

        – Terrance
        Aug 31 '17 at 14:48

















      • what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

        – Wagner Moreira
        Aug 31 '17 at 4:30











      • You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

        – Terrance
        Aug 31 '17 at 14:48
















      what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

      – Wagner Moreira
      Aug 31 '17 at 4:30





      what a great answer, thank you! this helped a lot! awesme!

      – Wagner Moreira
      Aug 31 '17 at 4:30













      You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

      – Terrance
      Aug 31 '17 at 14:48





      You can also change in the redshift.conf file, location-provider= to location-provider=manual to actually use the LAT and LON for your location to be more precise. The lat and lon numbers have to be in their own section for it to work. See wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/redshift#Manual_setup

      – Terrance
      Aug 31 '17 at 14:48













      0


















      A new simple and free software is Iris mini
      ,all you have to do is open it (as it's in appimage format)






      share|improve this answer






























        0


















        A new simple and free software is Iris mini
        ,all you have to do is open it (as it's in appimage format)






        share|improve this answer




























          0














          0










          0









          A new simple and free software is Iris mini
          ,all you have to do is open it (as it's in appimage format)






          share|improve this answer














          A new simple and free software is Iris mini
          ,all you have to do is open it (as it's in appimage format)







          share|improve this answer













          share|improve this answer




          share|improve this answer










          answered Sep 8 '18 at 20:11









          sasuki131sasuki131

          221 silver badge7 bronze badges




          221 silver badge7 bronze badges
























              0


















              If you have more than one monitor then eyesome might work better for you than redshift, nightlight or Windows 10 as it provides separate brightness and gamma (color temperature) for three monitors.



              Instead of Longitude and Latitude you enter your city name and country name, which is usually derived automatically. Sunrise and sunset times are obtained daily for your city. Then over a one to two hour period (more or less) which you define brightness and color temperature is gradually increased after sunrise and decreased before sunset so it unnoticeable.



              Even for adaptive brightness TVs you might prefer turning the feature off cranking up the brightness on the TV and using eyesome to control brightness instead.



              I wrote it and it's all in bash so you can change it for more monitors (than 3) or for Windows 10 or whatever.



              Sample screenshots



              eyesome main menu.png



              eyesome edit.png



              eyesome-edit-configuration-general.png



              eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor1.png



              eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor3.png






              share|improve this answer
































                0


















                If you have more than one monitor then eyesome might work better for you than redshift, nightlight or Windows 10 as it provides separate brightness and gamma (color temperature) for three monitors.



                Instead of Longitude and Latitude you enter your city name and country name, which is usually derived automatically. Sunrise and sunset times are obtained daily for your city. Then over a one to two hour period (more or less) which you define brightness and color temperature is gradually increased after sunrise and decreased before sunset so it unnoticeable.



                Even for adaptive brightness TVs you might prefer turning the feature off cranking up the brightness on the TV and using eyesome to control brightness instead.



                I wrote it and it's all in bash so you can change it for more monitors (than 3) or for Windows 10 or whatever.



                Sample screenshots



                eyesome main menu.png



                eyesome edit.png



                eyesome-edit-configuration-general.png



                eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor1.png



                eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor3.png






                share|improve this answer






























                  0














                  0










                  0









                  If you have more than one monitor then eyesome might work better for you than redshift, nightlight or Windows 10 as it provides separate brightness and gamma (color temperature) for three monitors.



                  Instead of Longitude and Latitude you enter your city name and country name, which is usually derived automatically. Sunrise and sunset times are obtained daily for your city. Then over a one to two hour period (more or less) which you define brightness and color temperature is gradually increased after sunrise and decreased before sunset so it unnoticeable.



                  Even for adaptive brightness TVs you might prefer turning the feature off cranking up the brightness on the TV and using eyesome to control brightness instead.



                  I wrote it and it's all in bash so you can change it for more monitors (than 3) or for Windows 10 or whatever.



                  Sample screenshots



                  eyesome main menu.png



                  eyesome edit.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-general.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor1.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor3.png






                  share|improve this answer
















                  If you have more than one monitor then eyesome might work better for you than redshift, nightlight or Windows 10 as it provides separate brightness and gamma (color temperature) for three monitors.



                  Instead of Longitude and Latitude you enter your city name and country name, which is usually derived automatically. Sunrise and sunset times are obtained daily for your city. Then over a one to two hour period (more or less) which you define brightness and color temperature is gradually increased after sunrise and decreased before sunset so it unnoticeable.



                  Even for adaptive brightness TVs you might prefer turning the feature off cranking up the brightness on the TV and using eyesome to control brightness instead.



                  I wrote it and it's all in bash so you can change it for more monitors (than 3) or for Windows 10 or whatever.



                  Sample screenshots



                  eyesome main menu.png



                  eyesome edit.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-general.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor1.png



                  eyesome-edit-configuration-monitor3.png







                  share|improve this answer















                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jun 4 at 3:01

























                  answered Jun 4 at 2:44









                  WinEunuuchs2UnixWinEunuuchs2Unix

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