How to Turn Glyph Lights on or off on Nothing Phones
Glyph lights offer lots of unique use cases on Nothing phones. From helping users know the status of something on the fly to silently alerting them when notifications arrive, the features that use the Glyph interface could be extremely helpful in scenarios when the user would usually get distracted. If you haven’t enabled the lights yet or want to turn them off for whatever reason, here’s how you can turn on or off the Glyph Lights on Nothing Phone (1), Phone (2), andPhone (2a).
Turn Glyph Lights on/off from Settings
The Glyph interface is not enabled by default on Nothing Phones, and you need to turn it on from the settings manually. The process of turning on Glyph lights is the same no matter which Nothing Phone you’re rocking. Here’s how to enable the glyph lights on Nothing phones.
To turn off lights, you simply retrace your steps until you reach the same Glyph Interface settings page. Then, toggle off the Glyph lights option; no more blinding lights.
Turn Glyph Lights on/off from Quick Settings
Another quick way to enable or disable the lights on your Nothing Phone is from Quick Settings tiles.
You can long press on the tile to explore moreGlyph interface settings, which we have explained in greater detail in our dedicated guide linked here.
Turn Glyph Interface on/off for Incoming Calls
If you simply want to turn Glyph lights off when receiving calls, there’s an option in the settings that does exactly that.
Schedule Glyph Lights to Turn on/off Automatically
Nothing OS 2.5 (review)allows you to schedule when the lights turn on and off. If the main reason you want to turn off the glyph lights on your Nothing Phone is that you get distracted by them while sleeping, perhaps you may want to schedule them instead of completely disabling them. Here’s how to do it.
Once enabled, the Glyphs should automatically turn off at the set time and turn on once the period ends.
These were the ways you can turn off glyph lights on Nothing phones running the latest version of Nothing OS. What are your thoughts on the role of the Glyph interface in making the smartphone experience less distracting? Let us know in the comment section below.
Abubakar Mohammed
Abubakar covers Tech on Beebom. Hailing from a Computer Science background, the start of his love for Tech dates back to 2011, when he was gifted a Dell Inspiron 5100. When he’s not covering Tech, you’ll find him binge-watching anime and Tech content on YouTube, hunting heads in competitive FPS games, or exploring Teyvat in Genshin Impact. He has previously worked for leading publications such as Fossbytes, How-To Geek, and Android Police.
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