
Keeping things dark and black should increase the lifespan of our OLED displays. OLEDs work by individually lighting up every single pixel, and with each light up the individual Red, Green, and Blue “sub pixel lights” will decay individually and thus causing burn-in on the long run.

If you’re watching a presentation or a video it wouldn’t trigger anyway.ĮDIT: It’s 3 mins now. I use very aggressive settings for the screensaver, because why not.

Get the Buttery Taskbar, system-wide taskbar suppression but a bit outdated and it was a bit wonky for me (sometimes the taskbar wouldn’t appear at all, possibly a conflict with other programs like Firefox.)ĭark Reader, forced dark-mode on websites. It’s not perfect though, as the taskbar will sometimes still peek out of the bottom (as can be seen above), so that’s why I’ve chosen to use Firefox as my main browserįirefox’s full-screen mode also suppresses the taskbar (you’d need to press the Win key to reveal it) and mousing over the top edge of the screen reveals the tab list.

This is a standard option in Windows 10, and to access it right click on your taskbar and choose Taskbar settings. People talk a lot about how this OLED+PC combination is bad because there is higher chance of burn-in, so here are the current measures I’ve tried to alleviate this. It has only been about a month since I got my LG C9 display which I use with my newly built PC (another post on that later).
