Dell XPS 13 9370: screen brightness changes based on window contents
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
up vote
26
down vote
favorite
On my new Dell XPS 13 9370, it seems that the display backlight brightness is adjusted based on the brightness of whatever's on the screen.
For example, say I have Sublime Text open with a dark theme, and I click on the file menu. The menu dropdown has a light background, and this is enough to darken the entire screen. Moving the selection over to the "Selection" menu causes the screen to lighten back up again, because this menu is apparently small enough for it not to count.
You can see the effect here, as I switch between a larger and smaller menu:
I find this feature unpleasantly jarring as I navigate through menus and similar. Is it possible to turn it off?
In case it is relevant, my system specs are as follows:
- Dell XPS 13 (9370)
- Debian Linux (sid)
- Cinnamon DE
laptop brightness dell-xps backlight
 |Â
show 5 more comments
up vote
26
down vote
favorite
On my new Dell XPS 13 9370, it seems that the display backlight brightness is adjusted based on the brightness of whatever's on the screen.
For example, say I have Sublime Text open with a dark theme, and I click on the file menu. The menu dropdown has a light background, and this is enough to darken the entire screen. Moving the selection over to the "Selection" menu causes the screen to lighten back up again, because this menu is apparently small enough for it not to count.
You can see the effect here, as I switch between a larger and smaller menu:
I find this feature unpleasantly jarring as I navigate through menus and similar. Is it possible to turn it off?
In case it is relevant, my system specs are as follows:
- Dell XPS 13 (9370)
- Debian Linux (sid)
- Cinnamon DE
laptop brightness dell-xps backlight
7
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
4
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
6
@Mala: please edit the title:widow
should bewindow
, but users reject my edit to fix this.
â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
4
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
4
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03
 |Â
show 5 more comments
up vote
26
down vote
favorite
up vote
26
down vote
favorite
On my new Dell XPS 13 9370, it seems that the display backlight brightness is adjusted based on the brightness of whatever's on the screen.
For example, say I have Sublime Text open with a dark theme, and I click on the file menu. The menu dropdown has a light background, and this is enough to darken the entire screen. Moving the selection over to the "Selection" menu causes the screen to lighten back up again, because this menu is apparently small enough for it not to count.
You can see the effect here, as I switch between a larger and smaller menu:
I find this feature unpleasantly jarring as I navigate through menus and similar. Is it possible to turn it off?
In case it is relevant, my system specs are as follows:
- Dell XPS 13 (9370)
- Debian Linux (sid)
- Cinnamon DE
laptop brightness dell-xps backlight
On my new Dell XPS 13 9370, it seems that the display backlight brightness is adjusted based on the brightness of whatever's on the screen.
For example, say I have Sublime Text open with a dark theme, and I click on the file menu. The menu dropdown has a light background, and this is enough to darken the entire screen. Moving the selection over to the "Selection" menu causes the screen to lighten back up again, because this menu is apparently small enough for it not to count.
You can see the effect here, as I switch between a larger and smaller menu:
I find this feature unpleasantly jarring as I navigate through menus and similar. Is it possible to turn it off?
In case it is relevant, my system specs are as follows:
- Dell XPS 13 (9370)
- Debian Linux (sid)
- Cinnamon DE
laptop brightness dell-xps backlight
laptop brightness dell-xps backlight
edited Sep 3 at 13:35
bertieb
5,269102141
5,269102141
asked Sep 3 at 2:30
Mala
2,89392834
2,89392834
7
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
4
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
6
@Mala: please edit the title:widow
should bewindow
, but users reject my edit to fix this.
â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
4
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
4
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03
 |Â
show 5 more comments
7
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
4
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
6
@Mala: please edit the title:widow
should bewindow
, but users reject my edit to fix this.
â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
4
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
4
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03
7
7
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
4
4
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
6
6
@Mala: please edit the title:
widow
should be window
, but users reject my edit to fix this.â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
@Mala: please edit the title:
widow
should be window
, but users reject my edit to fix this.â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
4
4
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
4
4
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03
 |Â
show 5 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
28
down vote
accepted
According to Dell_Guy on the Dell.com community forums:
You can fix this by disabling Dynamic Brightness Control under the BIOS settings.
Original Quote from Link:
You can go into BIOS settings (hit F2 as you are restarting your computer) - and DISABLE Dynamic Brightness Control in the display options. I don't know if you need to update the laptop to the LATEST bios to have this option (I did the update).
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
28
down vote
accepted
According to Dell_Guy on the Dell.com community forums:
You can fix this by disabling Dynamic Brightness Control under the BIOS settings.
Original Quote from Link:
You can go into BIOS settings (hit F2 as you are restarting your computer) - and DISABLE Dynamic Brightness Control in the display options. I don't know if you need to update the laptop to the LATEST bios to have this option (I did the update).
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
add a comment |Â
up vote
28
down vote
accepted
According to Dell_Guy on the Dell.com community forums:
You can fix this by disabling Dynamic Brightness Control under the BIOS settings.
Original Quote from Link:
You can go into BIOS settings (hit F2 as you are restarting your computer) - and DISABLE Dynamic Brightness Control in the display options. I don't know if you need to update the laptop to the LATEST bios to have this option (I did the update).
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
add a comment |Â
up vote
28
down vote
accepted
up vote
28
down vote
accepted
According to Dell_Guy on the Dell.com community forums:
You can fix this by disabling Dynamic Brightness Control under the BIOS settings.
Original Quote from Link:
You can go into BIOS settings (hit F2 as you are restarting your computer) - and DISABLE Dynamic Brightness Control in the display options. I don't know if you need to update the laptop to the LATEST bios to have this option (I did the update).
According to Dell_Guy on the Dell.com community forums:
You can fix this by disabling Dynamic Brightness Control under the BIOS settings.
Original Quote from Link:
You can go into BIOS settings (hit F2 as you are restarting your computer) - and DISABLE Dynamic Brightness Control in the display options. I don't know if you need to update the laptop to the LATEST bios to have this option (I did the update).
answered Sep 3 at 2:43
Michael Frank
5,8312541
5,8312541
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
add a comment |Â
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
1
1
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
Just commented the exact same thing :)
â BobtheMagicMoose
Sep 3 at 2:47
8
8
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
Wonderful! Thank you very much. I had always figured "Dynamic Brightness" referred to adjusting brightness with regard to ambient light, but reading closer in threads linked to from the one you refer to, I see "This is related to the displays Dynamic Backlight Control (DBC) technology. This feature will change the brightness of the display according to the content shown on the screen."
â Mala
Sep 3 at 3:19
9
9
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
Oh, they finally made it a BIOS setting? I remember a long Github thread about this misfeature having been permanently embedded in the LCD panel's firmware, and indeed in my Inspiron 5547 it only went away after the panel broke and got replaced.
â grawity
Sep 3 at 7:09
1
1
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
Wow, this is absolutely crazy. Who would even think of putting this into a laptop?
â pipe
Sep 3 at 14:53
add a comment |Â
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1354691%2fdell-xps-13-9370-screen-brightness-changes-based-on-window-contents%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
7
Why would Dell ever think this is a good idea?
â Ian Kemp
Sep 3 at 6:01
4
@IanKemp It looks like a terrible implementation of something that would be useful in some circumstances. For example, there's a TV show I'm watching at the moment where the banner before and after the ad breaks is an almost entirely white screen that's eye-burningly bright if I'm watching in a darkened room. If my laptop fixed that for me, I'd be delighted.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 13:23
6
@Mala: please edit the title:
widow
should bewindow
, but users reject my edit to fix this.â Patrick Hofman
Sep 3 at 13:36
4
@PatrickHofman That's bizarre. I submitted the same edit without knowing about yours and people were sensible and accepted it.
â David Richerby
Sep 3 at 16:29
4
@PatrickHofman Reviewers are often silly (I wanted to use a stronger word). IMO every one of them in this case should be banned from reviewing but that's not a battle we'll ever win
â Lightness Races in Orbit
Sep 3 at 18:03