At one point, I used FLux, but quit for a couple of different reasons even though I understand the benefits of it(and am pretty well convinced that they exist).
When I saw that Apple had included their own implementation in macOS, I started using it and overall like it better than Flux. With that said, I seem to recall that Flux would let me exclude certain applications from shifting. This is actually kind of a big deal to me, as if I'm working in Adobe Lightroom after sunset(which is pretty early this time of year) I might as well forget even trying. Put another way, I don't spend the time profiling and keeping up-to-date color profiles on my displays to have them messed up in the programs where they matter 12 hours a day(among other reasons, Flux would reset back to the default calibration in the morning and not a custom one, making extra work to get it back-night shift goes back to my custom calibration).
In any case, does anyone know if there's a way-short of toggling it off in message center-to have it turn off when I go to certain applications? As I mentioned, Lightroom is the big one for me.
When I saw that Apple had included their own implementation in macOS, I started using it and overall like it better than Flux. With that said, I seem to recall that Flux would let me exclude certain applications from shifting. This is actually kind of a big deal to me, as if I'm working in Adobe Lightroom after sunset(which is pretty early this time of year) I might as well forget even trying. Put another way, I don't spend the time profiling and keeping up-to-date color profiles on my displays to have them messed up in the programs where they matter 12 hours a day(among other reasons, Flux would reset back to the default calibration in the morning and not a custom one, making extra work to get it back-night shift goes back to my custom calibration).
In any case, does anyone know if there's a way-short of toggling it off in message center-to have it turn off when I go to certain applications? As I mentioned, Lightroom is the big one for me.