![]() + Option to place the Night Mode switch to toggle YouTube in black or white theme. + Option to loop the current video player + Option to fill the video player in your whole current tab + Option to show the Audio Visualization effect on top of the current video (Blocks, Frequency, and Music Tunnel) + Option to add a filter to the current video player (grayscale, sepia, invert, contrast, saturate, hue rotation, and brightness) + Option for Mouse Wheel Volume Control for each video player + Option to show the dark layer on the top of the windowĪlt + F8 to restore the default opacity valueĪlt + F9 to save the current opacity valueĪlt + F10 to enable/disable the Eye Protection featureĪlt + (arrow down) to decrease the opacityĪlt + * to toggle the lights on all open tabs + Option atmosphere lighting that shows a glow around the video player + Option Eye Protection for when it's night. + Option to turn on/off the fade in and fade out effects + Option to make the screen dark when the user clicks on the play button Shortcut key: T -> Do you like a real movie theater feeling? Users can select from highres > 8K > 5K > 4K > 1080p > 720p > 480p > 360p > 240p > 144p > defaultĪuto Wide: Automatically plays the video on the widest mode and moreĪuto HD: Set videos to play in HD automatically. + Support multiple video sites: YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo. + Turn the lights back on, by clicking on it Turn Off the Lights is a lightweight and useful add-in designed for a more comfortable watching experience.Ī few great features in this browser extension: By clicking on it again, the page will return to normal. With a single click on the lamp button, the page will fade to dark. Interested in behavioral economics? Apply to our bootcamp! Rolling applications, but better chances by Aug 1, 2019.The entire page will be fading to dark, so you can watch the videos as if you were in the cinema. I may never learn to turn the lights off, but I’ll (almost) always remember to take my keys. When aiming for behavior change, the best way may be to design systems that don’t make us change our behavior at all. ![]() Or, earbuds that always started with a 5 minute meditation if you put them in between certain hours. You could imagine a toothbrush that locked/unlocked your phone, so you wouldn’t check it when in bed. What other clever devices could help us manage our behavior? The device was already in our hands, and now it could just do more. They paired the internet browsing and photo capabilities onto an existing behavior we already did - make phone calls. They didn’t introduce a completely new device. However, it usually easier to make someone’s current routines or habits work harder for them, than ask them to start a completely new habit or behavior.Īt the basic level, this is what Apple did with the first iPhone. I don’t need to remember to turn the lights off, I only have to remember to take my keys! Many times when working on behavior change interventions we assume that we must actually CHANGE behavior. Taking my keys are paired with turning off the lights. And, when you take your key out of the holder to leave for the day, what happens? All the lights switch off. You’ll turn right back around and drop the key into the slot. If you forget to do this, you’ll quickly discover you have no electricity - no lights. When you enter a hotel room in Europe you must immediately drop your room key into the holder by door. ![]() The key holder is connected to your ability to turn on the lights You could pair turning off the lights…with taking my keys. Instead of trying to change what I do, leverage what I’m already doing. This may change my behavior a little, but it’s easy to see you probably couldn’t get me to fully conform.Īnother way is to leech on to my existing behavior. How would you get me to behave with lights, in the same way I behave with my keys? How could you ensure near 100% compliance to turning off the lights? I never remember the days I forget to turn off the lights. I remember calling my roommates begging for them to come home early. The handful of times I forgot my keys at home, I can vividly remember how it felt. Somehow, despite my wandering attention, my mind doesn’t allow me to neglect my keys. Interestingly, while my mind is elsewhere, there is one thing I never forget. I’m thinking about the emails that piled up from last night and if I’ll make my train. But when I’m walking out the door in the morning, my mind is elsewhere. I also consider myself someone who wants to save energy and someone who cares about the environment. ![]()
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