![]() Sorry, but yeah.the more Dark Mode, the better.You might have seen people use the new dark mode theme in Microsoft Office and wondered how to enable it for yourself. You can keep your brightness quite high for pictures and such, and still read comfortably. At night, in a dark room, with dark mode on, your eyes don't fight lights of 0 intensity (your room) and bright intensity (your screen). It's like someone points a flashlight in your eyes. Reading on a backlit screen is NOT like reading in a book. There is no strain because your eyes don't have to adjust to anything as the light reflected off of your book is just about at the same intensity as the light reflected off of your walls or ceiling, or night stand. You always have a light above or nearby that lights up more than just your book. And no, don't compare it with the 'books' either please. I've tried once to swap the colors just for fun.you get headache after half an hour of work.Īnd for all the people out there that think Dark Mode is just a fad or completely useless, please understand that taking the brightness down all the way at night is NOT what you need in order to comfortably read stuff on your phone or tablet. It just helps to see the colors so much better because your eyes don't fight the all the white space around them. ![]() I always had all my photo viewers set with dark (er) background for thumbnail view. Photoshop had a darkish' gray background since version 3! Now it's even darker. I have it an all my computers and it help a lot. On PC, my tool of choice is a little program called Negative Screen that has smart invert features. This is so simple to properly fix or introduce into iOS and yet it takes years before they do it. Then, just like Microsoft (half a**), the alarm clock is in Dark Mode by default, so if I'm reading and I'm in invert colors mode, and before sleep I need to check my Alarms, I open a bright white app that burns my eyes. Unfortunately Apple's 'Smart Invert' is ok once On, but awful to use due to the long time it takes to swap between normal and Smart Invert (on iphone 6, anyways). ![]() On my iOS devices I have my home button triple click set on invert screen. I hate Microsoft for implementing it half-a**ed as well. I agree! As a person with poor eyes, this is awesome! I really hate Apple for taking so long to implement a good, simple and consistent OS wide Dark mode. this is what I'd prefer for iOS.ĭark Gray + ORANGE how Apple did it. If I look at the attached screenshot I have to say though. Several other iOS apps have similar modes, including Twitter, YouTube, Reddit, and Twitch, while Apple's upcoming macOS Mojave also includes dark mode support. Last month, Microsoft launched a rebranded version of its Microsoft News app for iOS with a dark mode. ![]() The dark mode for is one of the most highly requested features for Microsoft's web mail service, according to listings on the feedback site, although there's still no word on whether a similar mode is coming to the mobile Outlook app. Currently it only works with the default blue theme. You can enable it from the Quick settings menu (the cog wheel icon in the upper right). The new dark mode actually adopts shades of grey to generate panel contrast, providing a more polished look as a result. ![]() The company teased the new mode earlier this month, suggesting it would be reminiscent of last year's Halloween theme for Outlook. Microsoft today launched a much-requested dark mode for its web mail service. ![]()
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