OK, I'll try that then. Thank you guys for the help.
---
Christopher Gilland
JAWS Certified, 2016.
Training Instructor.
clgillan...@gmail.com
Phone: (704) 256-8010 Extension 401.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jonathan Cohn" <jon.c.c...@gmail.com>
To: "Macintosh Blindness List" <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, March 21, 2016 7:51 PM
Subject: Re: Screen Brightness default
Yes, this was my experience with my 2009 MBP. If the brightness is set to 0
then it gets restored to 100% on reboot or re-login. I usually keep my
brightness at 3-6% and rarely find it getting reset except when somebody
else uses my system. :-)
.
Best wishes,
Jonathan Cohn
On 21 Mar 2016, at 16:23, E.T. <ancient.ali...@icloud.com> wrote:
Ok, my findings. I could reproduce this if I set brightness to 0% then
rebooted. I think at 0% the "automatically adjust brightness" checkbox is
dimmed.
I then set brightness level to 5% and checked the above option then
rebooted and was still at 5%. There may be a built in safeguard that will
not allow for total blackout at startup.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
ancient.ali...@icloud.com
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 3/20/2016 10:30 PM, Christopher-Mark Gilland wrote:
I echo Ben's last statement here, E.T. I'm not doubting you either, but
can you be a bit more specific?
Steps taken:
1. Either press FN+F1 until you reach 0%, or go to system prefs,
display, interact with the slider, and VO+Down arrow all the way to 0
percent. Sidenote, I'm doing this with the screen curtain disabled.
2. Reboot the machine. Perform these two steps either with the charger
plugged in or not. It doesn't matter.
Result: The screen returns to brightness level 100% upon successful
reboot once OSX loads.
Expected result: the screen should stay at the percentage set in the
above two steps once rebooted.
I see an option under system prefs when plugged in, or when on battery to
slightly dim the display, but that's not what I'm attempting to do. I'm
literally wishing to keep the exact same brightness level regardless,
once the system fully restarts and is fully booted.
Thank you for trying to help me trouble shoot this; your help is
appreciated.
Chris.
-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ben J. Bloomgren
Sent: Monday, March 21, 2016 1:14 AM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Screen Brightness default
I was able to reproduce Chris's problem. Neither the slider under system
preferences, displays, nor the energy settings does this. Maybe with
newer systems, it sticks. But with older macs, such as my Mid 2010
MacBook, and Chris's Late 2012 MacBook Pro, it does it identically the
same whether you use the function keys or the system prefs slider. It
resets the brightness to 100%. I also tested this on battery power, and
it doesn't do it. The energy setting would just dim the screen slightly,
whereas we're trying to literally maintain the exact screen brightness
percentage after reboot.
We're not doubting you, neither are we trying to make you look
incompetent or anything. We're just stumped.
Thanks,
Ben
----- Original Message -----
From: "E.T." <ancient.ali...@icloud.com>
To: <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 20, 2016 21:23
Subject: Re: Screen Brightness default
System preferences, Displays.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
ancient.ali...@icloud.com
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 3/20/2016 8:59 PM, Chris Gilland wrote:
Guys,
I really haven’t ever thought about this until now, but when I boot my
macbook, it is defaulting to 100% brightness regardless what I do. If I
set the screen to 0 brightness then either shutdown and later reboot, or
I
just simply restart without fully shutting down, doesn’t matter, as soon
as OSX comes back up, it’s back at 100, making me again have to hold
down
FN+F1 until it’s at 0. Don’t get me wrong. This is a very very very
minor annoyance, and it’s nothing I am terribly concerned about, but I’m
just wonderring if there, even with the aid of a 3rd party app, might be
a
way to make it stick.
This is the official, non-beta build of El Capitan on a late 2012
macbook
Pro 13 inch non retina system with a superdrive.
Chris.
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