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Comment Re:OS? (Score 0) 195

Mostly WIN7 and XP. I made a tool that switches between my high contrast colors and a default color scheme so I can read some text that is black on black. But for a lot of apps there is just no winning. It makes me want to bust out a disassembler and alter the colors manually. I figured people out there would have done that for some of the more mainstream apps.

Comment Re:Needs more clarification (Score 0) 195

With a predominately white background it literally feels like someone is shining a flashlight in my face. I made a tool for windows to switch between my high contrast desktop (green text, black BG and blue controls) and a 'normal' color scheme on the fly when I need to read something. I might give these glasses a try, looks like they could help. I knew a guy at an old job that put a hood over his monitor so he could see it better. A lot of older LCD monitors just dont display well with overhead fluorescent light.

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: What tools do people with glare sensitivity use?

der_pinchy writes: For many years I have used a high contrast desktop color scheme with green text on black background and notice more and more software uses a forced color scheme that can make it difficult to use.
For web browsing I have always used opera and its white on black user style sheet but have to constantly tweak it so that certain elements and transparent images are visible.
Is there anything to be done with some of the major offenders like Office or recent versions of Visual Studio? Even recent browsers that support user style sheets still use a forced color scheme on a lot of there dialog controls.

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