Has anyone on dzo's Aurora ICS noticed that after changing the brightness setting of the screen causes the backlight behind the buttons to flicker at times or not turn off after the screen has turned off?
- it appears to only occur if the buttons at the base of the front are not pressed after changing the brightness.
Related
When I adjust screen brightness to the minimum level ,I notice screen is blinking like a power cut occurring in the browser. Is this normal?
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1740385
Here is the thread for the issue, sadly it isn't rare at all...
Hi, started this thread to see if anyone had the same problem I'm having with my screen.
I have a Galaxy S4 GT-I9500 (Octa-core variation), it is running 4.4.2, rooted, stock Touchwiz.
The problem is that the screen starts to flicker almost as if it would want to turn off, when in low light conditions and auto-brightness on, it continues to flicker unless I set the brightness between +2 and +5. I can reproduce the issue without auto-brightness setting the brightness to the lowest, one notch above the lowest and there is no flickering. It is noticeable in white backgrounds and also when swiping down the notification center, that's the most noticeable instance but you can see it in the home screen and in any app.
I started noticing it when I had 4.2.2 Jelly bean (rooted), and I updated to Kitkat hoping it would be solved but it is the same, I updated through Kies and rooted, no Factory reset, I want to try that as last resort.
Funny thing I discovered is when I set Juice Defender to control my brightness it does not flicker even in -60% brightness, but when the dimming happens before the screen turns off it does flicker (and the dimming thing is controlled by the OS I think, not Juice Defender).
I wish I could put up a video but I don't have another phone to film it.
Anyone know if this is software or hardware? What can I do?
I'd like to add, that I changed the battery, disabled overlays in developers option, forced GPU rendering, tried Pimp my rom and played with all the settings, checked and unchecked every option in Display settings and it still flickered given the low brightness conditions.
I think I've found the best solution out there for most annoying screen flickering issues... Done a substential amount of digging and finally discovered the app "Twillight" works like a charm by enabling backlight control feature... Try it out first, then thank me and share your experience here ...
I'm having a couple issues with my nexus 4 after upgrading manually to Lollipop with the system image from Google Developers.
Sometimes, when the screen goes idle and turns off automatically or when it's turned off manually using the power button, the screen flashes on a higher brightness and shows the lockscreen before turning off. (I'm guessing the desired result is that the lockscreen should appear 'on screen' after the backlight is completely off).
What this causes is that when turning off the screen, the screen dims with the animation (fade to black and turn off), but before (and sometimes after) the animation is complete, it flashes for a few milliseconds displaying the lockscreen/background, even when locking the phone inside an app.
I could upload a video of the issue at a later time.
This bug didn't happen on any version/rom that went through my phone (many stock, many custom). Although I haven't tried installing another 5.0 ROM / AOSP.
The update also brought back a [hardware?] issue this Nexus 4 unit also has had since I got it. When dimming the screen using the brightness slider, sliding to the lowest setting turns off the backlight completely (effectively making the screen pitch black instead of dimming). This issue has been reported before and I was using Gravitybox to override the system lowest brightness level. Could these two issues be related? (Note that this issue didn't trigger this behavior before).
This issue has been reported by other users here:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-4/help/zero-brightness-t2168071
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-4/help/problem-nexus-4-brightness-t2052857
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvgt17sKQsU < this shows the screen going pitch black at lowest brightness, it happens either from the widget, the slider, and the option in settings.
Any ideas on why it happens or how can it be corrected?. Do you also have this issue?.
Many thanks in advance.
Anyone know if it is possible to stop the screen dimming just before it powers off? after a few recent ROM flashes it flickers when dim.
Note: this is nothing to do with auto brightness / screen timeout / Airview / Hardware fault or any settings that I can find.
I appears to be a system default that cannot be changed.
I am hoping that something in Build.prop or whatever can be altered, to either remove the dim completely or have the dim not go as low.
When battery is low or when turning it off?
And I think this is more kernel than rom related.
Never mind
GDReaper said:
When battery is low or when turning it off?
And I think this is more kernel than rom related.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Neither, it flickers as the dimmer comes on just before auto screen timeout blanks the screen.
only started a while ago after ROM/Kernel flash.
I had to switch out my s7e and my 2nd unit keeps dimming the screen when in low light. I have brightness at max and auto brightness turned off. Are there any fixes for this? Does anyone know if the Base (sp) rom fixes this?
Test if your device does this: set screen to max brightness and turn auto brightness off. turn your screen off. Turn off the light in your room. Turn screen on and unlock screen. It should be a bit dimmer. Now turn screen off, turn the rooms light back on, and turn the phone back on. It should now be brighter. Does your phone do this?
Bump
Mine does it too and while this issue has been documented on different forums I have yet to see a real season or fix. Found posts about it also happening on the S6. It is irritating as I thought that auto brightness turned off should completely prevent this. You can trigger changes by covering/uncovering the proximity sensors at the front top of the phone with your fingers.