Ask Different Asked by clearlight on October 30, 2021
Apple stopped Thunderbolt display and Cinema display line.
Recently announced an ungodly expensive ‘reference monitor’
beyond the need and budget of most people.
For my iMac, I bought two Apple-recommended 4K Dell monitors to go with my retina iMac. The Dell 4K monitors work fine.
But Apple dumped its monitor business without creating a way to adjust 3rd party monitor brightness from the keyboard. That’s unfortunate since there’s an industry standard DDC protocol to make it possible to control brightness ‘over-the-wire’.
Adjusting Dell monitor brightness from the physical panel button/menu is a hassle. It’s tedius, multi-step, awkward and worse if you have more than one external monitor.
I haven’t found any good apps that resolve this. There’s one on the App Store I found that looks like it works well, but it’s badly implemented. It simply inserts an overlay graphic with an opacity setting so it darkens the screen by covering it.
The problem is it darkens screenshots, ruining them!
The apps I tried are flaky, badly implemented, limited, badly designed…
Using Luna would help in this case.
It will basically sync your primary screen brightness, as well as the other necessaries to your second screen.
Check this out: https://lunar.fyi
Answered by vatana chhorn on October 30, 2021
I have been using Monitor Controll - https://github.com/the0neyouseek/MonitorControl - for a couple of months now with a Dell screen, and I have only words of praise.
Answered by Kolja on October 30, 2021
Brightness Menulet App mentioned above is a great option. You can find built releases of the app in forks:
So you don't really have to build it by yourself. You can check other forks and try to find other interesting solutions.
Answered by OKyr on October 30, 2021
I've found Lunar.app and it syncs the brightness from your PC to the external monitors. It has a lot of other features that I not yet have played with, but a uniform brightness is already great. The app looks nice, so thats a plus (and it's free).
Here is an article on lifehacker.com, because the information on the Lunar site is really sparse.
Answered by mvaneijgen on October 30, 2021
BRIGHTNESS MENULET APP (Free OpenSource code on GitHub, but you have to build it)
The app wil save you a lot of hassle over having to adjust brightness manually, but unfortunately isn't polished enough to be a product, so you need to build it, which unfortunately requires some familiarity with XCode and building macOS apps.
In macOS High Sierra, the app exited frequently enough (bug) that you'd have to restart it each time you wanted to adjust brightness. The workaround was to hit ctrl+spacebar to bring up Spotlight, type Brightness and relaunch Brightness Menulet App. Pretty quick. Not a big deal.
Fortunately, in Mojave and Catalina, the app doesn't seem to exit, at least not much, but the 'Follow main screen brightness' option no longer works, so I have to use the respective sliders in the drop down panel to control each Dell monitor's brightness. Works well enough because it just takes a few seconds and one doesn't do it that frequently.
How to build it:
You can use a pref make it launch at start (or use System Preferences, Users & Groups -> Login Items.
It creates an icon in the menubar that looks like a tiny Sun. Click it and the rest is self-descriptive.
Note: To bad this isn't available to typical users. It's really a feature Apple should provide since they pulled out the rug from people on 3rd external monitor support.
I think the reason it never became an app is that it's pretty tricky to make it work for all the monitors that it should support, and on all the macs and macBooks out there. Testing on all the possible configurations must be a nightmare.
Answered by clearlight on October 30, 2021
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