Flux, Redshift and Night Color don't work (Ubuntu Budgie)











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Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error










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    Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error










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      up vote
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      Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error










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      Help me, please. I can't work without flux. I tried everything. Flux does nothing (even when I press preview button), Night Color applet does nothing and Redshift gives "trying location provider 'geoclue2'" error







      budgie






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      asked Nov 25 at 12:00









      user896762

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          If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct to preview what will be installed: -s provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo.



          If you do decide to try sct, man sct has



          DESCRIPTION
          sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000

          OPTIONS
          temperature
          If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value

          -h If -h is passed sct will display usage information

          none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500


          So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500 for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct.






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            1 Answer
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            1 Answer
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            active

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            up vote
            1
            down vote













            If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct to preview what will be installed: -s provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo.



            If you do decide to try sct, man sct has



            DESCRIPTION
            sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000

            OPTIONS
            temperature
            If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value

            -h If -h is passed sct will display usage information

            none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500


            So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500 for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct.






            share|improve this answer

























              up vote
              1
              down vote













              If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct to preview what will be installed: -s provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo.



              If you do decide to try sct, man sct has



              DESCRIPTION
              sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000

              OPTIONS
              temperature
              If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value

              -h If -h is passed sct will display usage information

              none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500


              So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500 for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct.






              share|improve this answer























                up vote
                1
                down vote










                up vote
                1
                down vote









                If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct to preview what will be installed: -s provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo.



                If you do decide to try sct, man sct has



                DESCRIPTION
                sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000

                OPTIONS
                temperature
                If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value

                -h If -h is passed sct will display usage information

                none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500


                So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500 for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct.






                share|improve this answer












                If, for whatever reason, Flux, Redshift or the Night Color applet do not work for you, consider installing sct from the repositories. It's a small program and probably won't pull in many dependencies. You can try apt install -s sct to preview what will be installed: -s provides a simulation and doesn't need sudo.



                If you do decide to try sct, man sct has



                DESCRIPTION
                sct sets the screen's color temperature in a range from 1000 to 10000

                OPTIONS
                temperature
                If passed a value in the correct range (see above) sct will set the current screen temperature to this value

                -h If -h is passed sct will display usage information

                none If no options are passed sct sets the color temperature to the default of 6500


                So when you want a warmer screen, open a terminal and run sct 3500 for example. And when you want to revert to normalcy, just run sct.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 25 at 15:04









                DK Bose

                12.4k123983




                12.4k123983






























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