How do I make my display grayscale?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP








up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1












After reading this article from the the New York Times and others like it, I would like to make my screen black and white/grayscale. I am on Ubuntu 17.10 with Gnome 3.26.2 without X11. I am also on a ThinkPad x220.



I have tried a few things so far:



  • Change my monitor settings. I am on a laptop so it isn't possible.

  • Looking online. All the help seems to be for X11.

  • Compiz and other tools for X11. The new versions of Ubuntu are using Wayland instead now, so of course these wouldn't work.

  • Messing with color profiles. After spending time tinkering around with these, I don't think it is possible to create a color profile that would take a color display and make it grayscale.

  • Using the universal access's "magnifier" tool. With it I can effectively make my screen grayscale. I have the "Magnifier Improvements" extension installed because it makes it smoother, but I whether it is installed or not I have a few problems.

    1. It seems to take a fair bit of power

    2. My mouse disappears with the magnifier on.

    3. Even though it remembers the saturation value I set it every time I log in, I have to go through the settings menu to change the saturation. It remembers, but doesn't reapply.

    4. It has some odd bugs at times. The cross hair can be stuck in the middle of the screen or vanish entirely. Overall the magnifier isn't meant to just make the screen grayscale.


It would be great if there were someway to make the screen grayscale. Not only does it have the (probable) benefits the NYTimes described, but grayscale makes Night Light better!



I use a very low Night Light temperature (1000k, basically only the red pixels are on), so it can make it nearly impossible to read some text on the screen. When I make my screen grayscale with the magnifier, and then have Night Light on a top of that, I can read text far more clearly, and look at pictures/diagrams far more clearly.



So... Is there a good way to make my screen grayscale?










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
    – Pablo Bianchi
    Mar 8 at 2:24











  • @PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
    – Robert Riedl
    Mar 8 at 12:56










  • @PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
    – user803356
    Mar 8 at 23:39














up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1












After reading this article from the the New York Times and others like it, I would like to make my screen black and white/grayscale. I am on Ubuntu 17.10 with Gnome 3.26.2 without X11. I am also on a ThinkPad x220.



I have tried a few things so far:



  • Change my monitor settings. I am on a laptop so it isn't possible.

  • Looking online. All the help seems to be for X11.

  • Compiz and other tools for X11. The new versions of Ubuntu are using Wayland instead now, so of course these wouldn't work.

  • Messing with color profiles. After spending time tinkering around with these, I don't think it is possible to create a color profile that would take a color display and make it grayscale.

  • Using the universal access's "magnifier" tool. With it I can effectively make my screen grayscale. I have the "Magnifier Improvements" extension installed because it makes it smoother, but I whether it is installed or not I have a few problems.

    1. It seems to take a fair bit of power

    2. My mouse disappears with the magnifier on.

    3. Even though it remembers the saturation value I set it every time I log in, I have to go through the settings menu to change the saturation. It remembers, but doesn't reapply.

    4. It has some odd bugs at times. The cross hair can be stuck in the middle of the screen or vanish entirely. Overall the magnifier isn't meant to just make the screen grayscale.


It would be great if there were someway to make the screen grayscale. Not only does it have the (probable) benefits the NYTimes described, but grayscale makes Night Light better!



I use a very low Night Light temperature (1000k, basically only the red pixels are on), so it can make it nearly impossible to read some text on the screen. When I make my screen grayscale with the magnifier, and then have Night Light on a top of that, I can read text far more clearly, and look at pictures/diagrams far more clearly.



So... Is there a good way to make my screen grayscale?










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
    – Pablo Bianchi
    Mar 8 at 2:24











  • @PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
    – Robert Riedl
    Mar 8 at 12:56










  • @PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
    – user803356
    Mar 8 at 23:39












up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1






1





After reading this article from the the New York Times and others like it, I would like to make my screen black and white/grayscale. I am on Ubuntu 17.10 with Gnome 3.26.2 without X11. I am also on a ThinkPad x220.



I have tried a few things so far:



  • Change my monitor settings. I am on a laptop so it isn't possible.

  • Looking online. All the help seems to be for X11.

  • Compiz and other tools for X11. The new versions of Ubuntu are using Wayland instead now, so of course these wouldn't work.

  • Messing with color profiles. After spending time tinkering around with these, I don't think it is possible to create a color profile that would take a color display and make it grayscale.

  • Using the universal access's "magnifier" tool. With it I can effectively make my screen grayscale. I have the "Magnifier Improvements" extension installed because it makes it smoother, but I whether it is installed or not I have a few problems.

    1. It seems to take a fair bit of power

    2. My mouse disappears with the magnifier on.

    3. Even though it remembers the saturation value I set it every time I log in, I have to go through the settings menu to change the saturation. It remembers, but doesn't reapply.

    4. It has some odd bugs at times. The cross hair can be stuck in the middle of the screen or vanish entirely. Overall the magnifier isn't meant to just make the screen grayscale.


It would be great if there were someway to make the screen grayscale. Not only does it have the (probable) benefits the NYTimes described, but grayscale makes Night Light better!



I use a very low Night Light temperature (1000k, basically only the red pixels are on), so it can make it nearly impossible to read some text on the screen. When I make my screen grayscale with the magnifier, and then have Night Light on a top of that, I can read text far more clearly, and look at pictures/diagrams far more clearly.



So... Is there a good way to make my screen grayscale?










share|improve this question















After reading this article from the the New York Times and others like it, I would like to make my screen black and white/grayscale. I am on Ubuntu 17.10 with Gnome 3.26.2 without X11. I am also on a ThinkPad x220.



I have tried a few things so far:



  • Change my monitor settings. I am on a laptop so it isn't possible.

  • Looking online. All the help seems to be for X11.

  • Compiz and other tools for X11. The new versions of Ubuntu are using Wayland instead now, so of course these wouldn't work.

  • Messing with color profiles. After spending time tinkering around with these, I don't think it is possible to create a color profile that would take a color display and make it grayscale.

  • Using the universal access's "magnifier" tool. With it I can effectively make my screen grayscale. I have the "Magnifier Improvements" extension installed because it makes it smoother, but I whether it is installed or not I have a few problems.

    1. It seems to take a fair bit of power

    2. My mouse disappears with the magnifier on.

    3. Even though it remembers the saturation value I set it every time I log in, I have to go through the settings menu to change the saturation. It remembers, but doesn't reapply.

    4. It has some odd bugs at times. The cross hair can be stuck in the middle of the screen or vanish entirely. Overall the magnifier isn't meant to just make the screen grayscale.


It would be great if there were someway to make the screen grayscale. Not only does it have the (probable) benefits the NYTimes described, but grayscale makes Night Light better!



I use a very low Night Light temperature (1000k, basically only the red pixels are on), so it can make it nearly impossible to read some text on the screen. When I make my screen grayscale with the magnifier, and then have Night Light on a top of that, I can read text far more clearly, and look at pictures/diagrams far more clearly.



So... Is there a good way to make my screen grayscale?







gnome 17.10 wayland






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 8 at 7:19









Pablo Bianchi

1,8261323




1,8261323










asked Mar 8 at 0:39







user803356














  • 1




    Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
    – Pablo Bianchi
    Mar 8 at 2:24











  • @PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
    – Robert Riedl
    Mar 8 at 12:56










  • @PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
    – user803356
    Mar 8 at 23:39












  • 1




    Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
    – Pablo Bianchi
    Mar 8 at 2:24











  • @PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
    – Robert Riedl
    Mar 8 at 12:56










  • @PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
    – user803356
    Mar 8 at 23:39







1




1




Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
– Pablo Bianchi
Mar 8 at 2:24





Intel? Nvidia? Reducing colors (ie, saturation) with CCSM was answered here. Try xcalib, this X setup. Maybe your video device support gddccontrol. Maybe changing color temperature with Redshift is enough for you.
– Pablo Bianchi
Mar 8 at 2:24













@PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
– Robert Riedl
Mar 8 at 12:56




@PabloBianchi, there seems to be an issue with xcalib currently : Error - unsupported ramp size 0
– Robert Riedl
Mar 8 at 12:56












@PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
– user803356
Mar 8 at 23:39




@PabloBianchi, I am not on X, the Ubuntu 17.10 is on Wayland. The gddccontrol may work, I don't know, but I found a solution.
– user803356
Mar 8 at 23:39










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Install the following extension:
https://github.com/laerne/desaturate_all



To do this copy the files into a folder called .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/desaturate_all@nicolas.brack.mail.be



Logout and log back in, then you should be able to enable the extension through gnome-tweak-tool or by browsing to https://extensions.gnome.org/local



Once enabled, grayscale can be quickly turned on and off with the art pallet in the top right coner.



I think you will agree that a grayscale screen with Night Light works better than better Night Light by itself (if you use a color tempeture that is super low). Some things to look for: the scroll bar, the picture of colored penciles, Firefox logo, and the plant in the bottom left.



Here are some comparison screenshots:



Full Color
Full Color



Grayscale
Grayscale



Night Light/Redshift with Full Color
Night Light with Full Color



Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale
Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale






share|improve this answer






















    Your Answer







    StackExchange.ready(function()
    var channelOptions =
    tags: "".split(" "),
    id: "89"
    ;
    initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

    StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
    // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
    if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
    StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
    createEditor();
    );

    else
    createEditor();

    );

    function createEditor()
    StackExchange.prepareEditor(
    heartbeatType: 'answer',
    convertImagesToLinks: true,
    noModals: false,
    showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
    reputationToPostImages: 10,
    bindNavPrevention: true,
    postfix: "",
    onDemand: true,
    discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
    ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
    );



    );













     

    draft saved


    draft discarded


















    StackExchange.ready(
    function ()
    StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1012905%2fhow-do-i-make-my-display-grayscale%23new-answer', 'question_page');

    );

    Post as a guest





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    3
    down vote













    Install the following extension:
    https://github.com/laerne/desaturate_all



    To do this copy the files into a folder called .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/desaturate_all@nicolas.brack.mail.be



    Logout and log back in, then you should be able to enable the extension through gnome-tweak-tool or by browsing to https://extensions.gnome.org/local



    Once enabled, grayscale can be quickly turned on and off with the art pallet in the top right coner.



    I think you will agree that a grayscale screen with Night Light works better than better Night Light by itself (if you use a color tempeture that is super low). Some things to look for: the scroll bar, the picture of colored penciles, Firefox logo, and the plant in the bottom left.



    Here are some comparison screenshots:



    Full Color
    Full Color



    Grayscale
    Grayscale



    Night Light/Redshift with Full Color
    Night Light with Full Color



    Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale
    Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale






    share|improve this answer


























      up vote
      3
      down vote













      Install the following extension:
      https://github.com/laerne/desaturate_all



      To do this copy the files into a folder called .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/desaturate_all@nicolas.brack.mail.be



      Logout and log back in, then you should be able to enable the extension through gnome-tweak-tool or by browsing to https://extensions.gnome.org/local



      Once enabled, grayscale can be quickly turned on and off with the art pallet in the top right coner.



      I think you will agree that a grayscale screen with Night Light works better than better Night Light by itself (if you use a color tempeture that is super low). Some things to look for: the scroll bar, the picture of colored penciles, Firefox logo, and the plant in the bottom left.



      Here are some comparison screenshots:



      Full Color
      Full Color



      Grayscale
      Grayscale



      Night Light/Redshift with Full Color
      Night Light with Full Color



      Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale
      Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        3
        down vote










        up vote
        3
        down vote









        Install the following extension:
        https://github.com/laerne/desaturate_all



        To do this copy the files into a folder called .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/desaturate_all@nicolas.brack.mail.be



        Logout and log back in, then you should be able to enable the extension through gnome-tweak-tool or by browsing to https://extensions.gnome.org/local



        Once enabled, grayscale can be quickly turned on and off with the art pallet in the top right coner.



        I think you will agree that a grayscale screen with Night Light works better than better Night Light by itself (if you use a color tempeture that is super low). Some things to look for: the scroll bar, the picture of colored penciles, Firefox logo, and the plant in the bottom left.



        Here are some comparison screenshots:



        Full Color
        Full Color



        Grayscale
        Grayscale



        Night Light/Redshift with Full Color
        Night Light with Full Color



        Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale
        Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale






        share|improve this answer














        Install the following extension:
        https://github.com/laerne/desaturate_all



        To do this copy the files into a folder called .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/desaturate_all@nicolas.brack.mail.be



        Logout and log back in, then you should be able to enable the extension through gnome-tweak-tool or by browsing to https://extensions.gnome.org/local



        Once enabled, grayscale can be quickly turned on and off with the art pallet in the top right coner.



        I think you will agree that a grayscale screen with Night Light works better than better Night Light by itself (if you use a color tempeture that is super low). Some things to look for: the scroll bar, the picture of colored penciles, Firefox logo, and the plant in the bottom left.



        Here are some comparison screenshots:



        Full Color
        Full Color



        Grayscale
        Grayscale



        Night Light/Redshift with Full Color
        Night Light with Full Color



        Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale
        Night Light/Redshift with Grayscale







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 9 at 19:46

























        answered Mar 8 at 23:40







        user803356


































             

            draft saved


            draft discarded















































             


            draft saved


            draft discarded














            StackExchange.ready(
            function ()
            StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1012905%2fhow-do-i-make-my-display-grayscale%23new-answer', 'question_page');

            );

            Post as a guest













































































            Popular posts from this blog

            pylint3 and pip3 broken

            Missing snmpget and snmpwalk

            How to enroll fingerprints to Ubuntu 17.10 with VFS491