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    Give n900 screen a yellowish tint

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    tfj | # 1 | 2014-01-13, 17:19 | Report

    I would like to give my N900 screen a distinctly
    yellowish cast, to make it easier on the eyes at
    night, and less disruptive of my melon-tonin'.

    Yes, I've tried scribbling it with a yellow highlighter
    pen, but the 'ink' remained liquid and rubbed off too
    soon.

    A piece of yellow cellophane or similar film should work,
    but I'm not sure how to make it sticky yet optically
    clear (rubber cement, rolled very thin, may work).

    The ideal way, though, may be altering some display code,
    to give just the tint desired. Is there some n900-
    related program that can do this (there's one thread giving
    details about this, but it's for the n9; there's also mention
    of "screen filters", overlaying a transparent image, for
    Android).

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    pichlo | # 2 | 2014-01-13, 18:01 | Report

    There was a thread reecently on the very same topic. Try to see if it helps you:

    http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=89858

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    anthonie | # 3 | 2014-01-13, 18:11 | Report

    Or try some old school non-digital hacking:

    http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/51..._Film_car.html

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    Estel | # 4 | 2014-01-13, 18:22 | Report

    Originally Posted by tfj View Post
    Yes, I've tried scribbling it with a yellow highlighter
    pen, but the 'ink' remained liquid and rubbed off too
    soon.
    W-h-hat? Sorry, I know this post is useless, but I'm actually too speechless to elaborate more.

    I just thought, that almost nothing in sphere of N900's hardware modifications can so much surprise me. I was wrong. So. Damn. Wrong.

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    mr_pingu | # 5 | 2014-01-13, 19:37 | Report

    Maybe you can try to get f.lux or redshift working on maemo. Works really great on my jailbroken iTouch. (Don't shoot me for having an half eaten Apple)

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    pichlo | # 6 | 2014-01-14, 11:34 | Report

    Originally Posted by anthonie View Post
    Or try some old school non-digital hacking:

    http://www.alibaba.com/product-gs/51..._Film_car.html
    That's actually not a bad idea. Another option is something like this:

    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Prince-Lionh...cm_cr-mr-title

    It is designed as a sunscreen for car windows. A plastic foil that sticks to the window by pure static force and holds tight as a tick (i.e. does not let go, can withstand opening and closing the window etc). Feel free to read my review. I've used it for over three years without a glitch.

    It is a bit large but can be cut to size to fit a phone screen. The tint is light brown, not blue as in the Amazon picture. And it can double as a scratch protector too!

    Of course, they may be similar products already tailored for mobile phone screens. Just have a look around.

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    elros34 | # 7 | 2014-01-14, 17:20 | Report

    tfj, that's a great idea. I made test application - it works for not fullscreen windows.

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    Last edited by elros34; 2014-01-14 at 17:38.
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    tfj | # 8 | 2014-01-15, 14:49 | Report

    Originally Posted by Estel View Post
    W-h-hat? Sorry, I know this post is useless, but I'm actually too speechless to elaborate more.

    I just thought, that almost nothing in sphere of N900's hardware modifications can so much surprise me. I was wrong. So. Damn. Wrong.
    I never removed the original protective film you're supposed
    to peel off, so there's protection there. Some kind of yellow
    marker may dry properly. Isn't the screen just glass, or is there
    some sensitive circuitry or film on the surface?

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    Estel | # 9 | 2014-01-15, 15:54 | Report

    The outer layer is integrated (as in - you won't disassemble it without breaking it beyond repair) with digitizer, aka "touch layer".

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    zlatokosi | # 10 | 2014-01-15, 17:09 | Report

    Originally Posted by tfj View Post
    Isn't the screen just glass, or is there
    some sensitive circuitry or film on the surface?
    There definitely is a film on the surface (because mine is almost completely peeled off already), I assume it's some sort of scratch protection - because the areas without the film scratch easily.

    I would advise a software fix over a hardware one - unless you know you'll never need full brightness.

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