There are 6 repositories under ddc-ci topic.
A Windows desktop tool to adjust the brightness of multiple monitors with ease
Windows implementation of the ddcutil Linux program for querying and changing monitor settings, such as brightness and color levels.
Automatically adjust monitor / screen brightness at night using sunrise/sunset times
phos is a utility that allows you to control the brightness of your monitors using a user-friendly interface.
Scheduled DDC/CI display dimming for Windows
Package displayController provides a way to access the low-level monitor API in Windows system to control the display monitor function through DDC/CI, such as brightness, volume, etc
Powers off all DDC/CI capable displays on windows shutdown
A high-level DDC/CI library for Node written in Rust for efficient and fast control of displays, monitors and DDC-enabled hardware
A high-level library for Node DDC/CI written in Rust for efficient and fast control of hardware. Check the async version: https://github.com/ThalusA/ddc-node
Control screen brightness (DDC/gamma) and temperature using hotkeys, with customizable limits.
Synchronize the brightness of an external display with a main (integrated) display
A small headless utility program for powering off all DDC/CI capable monitors connected to the system.
Adjust monitor's brightness support multiple monitors via DDC protocol
Simple Python Program to adjust external monitor brightness over the course of the day using ddc/ci
🖥️ Set shortcuts to control the brightness of Displays via DCC/CI
Triple monitor brightness manager plugin for Hammerspoon
DDC/CI Tools for OS X, control your monitor through software
KVM switch solution utilising an industrial USB switch as the trigger and a Raspberry Pi as the DDC console that changes the input source of the connected monitor. This tandem switch implements KVM switch functionality without interfering with video output in any way.
A simple Python daemon for controlling display brightness via DDC/CI with DBus messages
Almost like a KVM switch, but using SPICE, a virtual machine, and a dedicated GPU with a regular monitor connected to both machines.