
Play Store screenshot of the OnSwitch Hue app You don’t just need a lightstrip to follow this guide. For example, a Hue A19 or E14 bulb will also work fine as long as you buy the “Color and White Ambiance” version. Note: whilst the pictures above show a Hue Lightstrip, you can make your lights change on any color-compatible Hue bulb or light. Thankfully this is easy to achieve via a range of methods – which I explore below. If you’re having a party or just want some mood lighting, you may want to have your Hue lights change color automatically instead of having them in one static color (which is what happens with standard Hue scenes and routines). This is something that’s very easy with LIFX, via the Effects tab on the app. However one of the things I always disliked about the official Hue app is that you can’t easily say to a bulb “have fun and change color rapidly”. These white diodes are essential because it’s hard to achieve certain colors (and, of course, mainly white lights) with just red, green and blue diodes – so having separate white diodes allows Hue lights to deliver much more diverse color ranges. There’s also white diodes (whilst some Hue lights only have one white diode, many have both cool and warm white diodes): In other words, there are the three primary color diodes to allow for color changes – these often appear as a single diode (an RGB one) instead of being three separate diodes. The way that Philips Hue color bulbs (and light strips) allow for 16 million color changes is by using multiple diodes on each product:
Hue go apple store full#
In other words, a Philips Hue device that only says “White” or “White Ambiance” will not allow for full RGB color changes, but anything saying “Color” will allow this.

This is possible on all Hue bulbs and light strips called “White Ambiance and Color”.

Video can’t be loaded because JavaScript is disabled: Philips Hue Lightstrip V4 #shorts video – testing out the Hue Colorloop lab formula ()
