You are not logged in.
basically, I want to make firefox clip anything higher than #ddd (light gray) for the whole page(including images and flash), black on white gives me a headache, unfortunately its used far too often on the web.
Last edited by Hessiess (2008-10-12 15:23:44)
Offline
that would be simple enough to do with a greasemonkey script.
Offline
preferences > content > colors
There's a checkbox "allow sites to set their own" or something that is checked by default.
Offline
that would be simple enough to do with a greasemonkey script.
thanks, looks interesting
preferences > content > colors
There's a checkbox "allow sites to set their own" or something that is checked by default.
while that works for some pages, It stops background images loading, which messes up the layout of some pages,
my origonal idea was more along the lines of
rasterize page -> post proses wight clipping /RGB curve -> draw to screen.
the web page would still work the same as when it was unaltered, but would not have the high contrast problem.
Last edited by Hessiess (2008-10-12 15:24:25)
Offline
Is there something odd about your viewing situation? I'm surprised you can't fix the problem with lighting and your screen calibration controls.
Offline
Is there something odd about your viewing situation? I'm surprised you can't fix the problem with lighting and your screen calibration controls.
My screen is calibrated for displaying images acuratly, as im interested in 3DCG, mostly high contrast interfaces can be rectifyed via themeing, the only exeption being the web.
Offline
You can get the Stylish extension, and look for a dark style on userstyles.org.
Below is the style I am using at the moment. It makes everything terminal-like, so it is a godsend on my eyes.
@namespace url(http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml);
@-moz-document url-prefix(http://), url-prefix(ftp://), url-prefix(file://), url-prefix(https://) {
* {
color: white !important;
background: none !important;
background-color: black !important;
-moz-opacity: 1 !important;
}
a:link, a:visited, a:hover, a:active, li {
font-weight: normal !important;
text-decoration: none !important;
}
a:link {
color: yellow !important;
}
a:visited {
color: olive !important;
}
a:hover {
color: lime !important;
}
a:active {
color: green !important;
}
input, select, button {
background: black !important;
color: red !important;
}
b, strong {
color: lime !important;
}
i, em {
color: green !important;
}
}
Offline
To do this alltogether use compiz or other thing and play with dimming and transparency
Offline
Is there something odd about your viewing situation? I'm surprised you can't fix the problem with lighting and your screen calibration controls.
My screen is calibrated for displaying images acuratly, as im interested in 3DCG, mostly high contrast interfaces can be rectifyed via themeing, the only exeption being the web.
Then how about a gentler color profile for desktop use, if it's necessary to have extreme brightness for graphics?
Offline
You can get the Stylish extension, and look for a dark style on userstyles.org.
Below is the style I am using at the moment. It makes everything terminal-like, so it is a godsend on my eyes.@namespace url(http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml); @-moz-document url-prefix(http://), url-prefix(ftp://), url-prefix(file://), url-prefix(https://) { * { color: white !important; background: none !important; background-color: black !important; -moz-opacity: 1 !important; } a:link, a:visited, a:hover, a:active, li { font-weight: normal !important; text-decoration: none !important; } a:link { color: yellow !important; } a:visited { color: olive !important; } a:hover { color: lime !important; } a:active { color: green !important; } input, select, button { background: black !important; color: red !important; } b, strong { color: lime !important; } i, em { color: green !important; } }
thanks, that works verry well actualy ...except for images
Then how about a gentler color profile for desktop use, if it's necessary to have extreme brightness for graphics?
'extreme brightness' is the last thing you want for doing accurate image work, unless you want colours close to black to be truncated. I just find black on white very hard to reed.
To do this alltogether use compiz or other thing and play with dimming and transparency
Thanks for the suggestion, but I don't use compiz. im currently using Awesome.
Offline
what's with the white boxes on this site? using an edited version of Wintervenom's script.
Last edited by Hessiess (2008-10-12 15:25:50)
Offline
Then how about a gentler color profile for desktop use, if it's necessary to have extreme brightness for graphics?
'extreme brightness' is the last thing you want for doing accurate image work
Well, yeah. That's why my first assumption was a configuration error.
Offline
http://uploader.polorix.net//files/908/ … enshot.jpg
what's with the white boxes on this site? using an edited version of Wintervenom's script.
I never figured this out.
Last edited by Wintervenom (2009-08-05 13:46:43)
Offline