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by arrrg 4901 days ago
Lowering the brightness? Sure. Switching to a dark theme? Not so much.

If you are using a LCD the color of your pixels doesn't matter. Ok, it might matter a little bit but not much and it's not as easy as saying that white uses more power than black. It might even be the other way around.

In an LCD the color is determined by a liquid cristal filter that can be turned on or off and dimmed. The filter itself needs hardly any power, however. Not compared to the actual light that shines through that filter.

The light comes from LEDs or CFLs (I guess in principle you can use any light source but those two have useful form factors and need less power than, say, incandescent lightbulbs) behind that filter. And that light is always on. Some TVs have local dimming to make the blacks blacker in certain regions of the image, but computer monitors don't.

So by using a dark theme, all you influence is the filter, not the actual lights. As you might know, covering up a lightbulb so you don't see it's light anymore doesn't magically make the lightbulb consume no more power.

AMOLED displays work differently. There the pixels themselves light up or don't. They are like a matrix of thousands of minuscule lightbulbs you can individually turn on or off.

2 comments

Don't forget CRTs! ;) Using a dark theme reduces their power usage.

http://i.stack.imgur.com/c6yrk.jpg (From here, http://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/4373/does-a-webp...)

While there's definitely a difference, most likely because of dynamic contrast which might be negligible once you lower the brightness, the reason I switch to a dark theme is because low brightness white looks awful. Especially in a dark room. The monitor I'm using draws around 120 watts so lowering the brightness is a must.