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justgetflux.com
Software to make your life better by adapting your screen to the time of day

What is justgetflux.com?

f.lux is a software application designed to enhance visual comfort and sleep quality by dynamically adjusting the color temperature of computer displays according to the time of day. During daylight hours, the screen mimics sunlight, while at night it shifts to warmer tones that resemble indoor lighting, reducing the emission of blue light that can disrupt circadian rhythms.

Users simply input their location and preferred lighting type, after which f.lux operates automatically without further intervention. The tool aims to mitigate issues like eye strain and sleep disturbances caused by prolonged screen exposure, particularly during evening hours. It supports various operating systems and offers additional features such as integration with compatible lighting systems for a cohesive ambient experience.

Features

  • Automatic Color Adjustment: Adapts screen color temperature based on time of day and user location
  • Sleep Enhancement: Reduces blue light at night to improve sleep quality and circadian rhythm
  • Easy Setup: Requires only location and lighting type input for automatic operation
  • Cross-Platform Support: Available for macOS, Windows, and Linux operating systems
  • Lighting Integration: Allows control of compatible lights to sync with screen changes

Use Cases

  • Reducing eye strain during late-night computer use
  • Improving sleep quality by minimizing blue light exposure before bedtime
  • Creating a more comfortable viewing experience in varying lighting conditions
  • Synchronizing ambient room lighting with screen adjustments for a cohesive environment
  • Supporting healthier screen habits for students, professionals, and frequent computer users

Blogs:

  • Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Top 6 AI note-taking tools for 2026: in-person, online, and hybrid use cases

    Most AI note-taking lists are really lists of meeting bots, which join your video call and transcribe it. That's useful, but it's half the picture. Decisions happen in hallway conversations, client dinners, on-site visits, and hybrid rooms where nobody is on a video link. This guide covers different parts of the note-taking workflow: hardware capture for in-person settings, platform-native tools for online calls, and AI layers for organizing and synthesizing what you've captured. It compares six tools by capture context, workflow fit, pricing, and limitations.

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