Halo Monitor Light Bar — Auto-Dim & Color Temperature
The Last Hour of Work, Without the Eye Strain.
A precision-engineered light bar that clips onto the top of your monitor and bathes your desk in glare-free, asymmetric warm-to-cool light. An ambient sensor reads the room and auto-dims to match. Touch the bar to switch from warm focus light at 11pm to cool clarity at 9am.
Solves a real problem
Overhead room lights cast harsh shadows on your keyboard and reflect off the screen. Traditional desk lamps eat up surface area you don't have. After three hours, your eyes feel like sandpaper. This light sits 6 inches above your monitor, projects asymmetrically forward (zero screen reflection), and tracks ambient light so the brightness is always right. Designed by engineers who spent too many late nights coding in the dark.
Key Features
- Asymmetric optical lens — illuminates the desk without reflecting on the screen
- Ambient light sensor — auto-dims to match room conditions (manual override included)
- Color temperature: 2700K (warm) ↔ 6500K (daylight cool), 8 levels
- Brightness: 8 levels, max 500 lux at desk level
- Touch-sensitive controls on the bar itself — no remote, no app
- Counterweight clip fits monitors 0.4"–1.4" thick (curved or flat)
- USB-C powered — no wall adapter, plug into your computer or any USB port
- Length: 17.7" (45 cm) — matches a 24"–34" monitor width
- Memory: remembers your last brightness and color preset
How to use it
The hinged counterweight clamps over the top edge of your monitor in seconds — no screws, no adhesive. Run the USB-C cable to a port on your computer, hub, or wall adapter. Touch the right side of the bar to cycle color temperature, the left to set brightness, the center to toggle auto-dim. The bar remembers your settings.
Perfect Gift For
The remote worker whose home setup deserves better, the gamer who never gets the lighting right, the designer matching colors at 2am, the writer working at the kitchen table, students pulling thesis nights, and the friend who's been complaining about screen fatigue since the work-from-home shift.