I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode.
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I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja I have a similar problem in Zoom meetings. They have changed the chat box to dark mode, and Zoom keeps recommending ways to change it back to light mode that just don't work on my computer.
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@drahardja YES! I have astigmatism so it makes light on dark immensely hard and uncomfortable to read unless I bump up the text size

@ghalldev @drahardja That’s so curious. I too have astigmatism and need reading glasses but I find light backgrounds extremely uncomfortable on the eyes.
Dark mode has been a god send to me. I don’t like white on black - I use dark grey and some very light shade of grey, and on my kobo I use a yellow tint.
I have trouble with brightness in general and wear transitions lenses, or very dark sunglasses when the day is too bright. That may be the reason the light mode bothers me so much.
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@ghalldev @drahardja That’s so curious. I too have astigmatism and need reading glasses but I find light backgrounds extremely uncomfortable on the eyes.
Dark mode has been a god send to me. I don’t like white on black - I use dark grey and some very light shade of grey, and on my kobo I use a yellow tint.
I have trouble with brightness in general and wear transitions lenses, or very dark sunglasses when the day is too bright. That may be the reason the light mode bothers me so much.
@catzilla @drahardja That is interesting re: brightness, I have the opposite problem I have trouble in the dark and I never wear sunglasses.
Oddly I will occasionally switch to dark mode if it’s a rainy day because I get headaches.

Eyes are weird.
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@dannyman HTML *can* be semantic, but only if the web developer cared. Many websites now use an intermediary framework like React that renders everything as divs, without any further meaning.
Some websites are considerate enough to use semantic tags like <article> but this is by no means universal, or even widespread in my experience.
Nah, that's not React's fault. That's developer's. You can use semantic HTML in react as well.
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I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja
I'm far from expert at web stuff. But I will try to implement this on my sites. -
I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja and also light-on-dark because some folk have so many floaters it's not worth the effort of reading in light mode.
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I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja@sfba.social
I will always loudly advocate for every site to support both, default to the user's setting, and have a prominent control to switch theme. -
@drahardja
I'm far from expert at web stuff. But I will try to implement this on my sites. -
I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
And not just dark mode/light mode. Some folks build their sites with light gray on dark gray or the reverse. Cataracts reduce one's ability to decode low contrast; before I had my cataract surgery I could not read sites with gray on gray text, whether light or dark mode.
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R relay@relay.publicsquare.global shared this topic
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I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
You should try the Dark Reader plugin
Despite the name, you can compel it to make sites light.
Dark Reader — dark theme for every website
Enable dark mode (night mode) on all websites
Dark Reader (darkreader.org)
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You should try the Dark Reader plugin
Despite the name, you can compel it to make sites light.
Dark Reader — dark theme for every website
Enable dark mode (night mode) on all websites
Dark Reader (darkreader.org)
@dr_barnowl I’ll give it a try!
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I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja I completely agree. If a site is dark only I just leave. I can't be bothered with it.
I've moaned a few times.
https://forkingmad.blog/dark-web-sites/ -
I am begging website owners to always provide a light mode. It’s an accessibility issue for me: my aging eyes are no longer able to view light-on-dark text for extended periods without severe ghosting/afterimages.
@drahardja Better yet, have them honor the browser foreground and background colors (which follow the system theme) and font selection. That would simplify a lot of accessibility issues.
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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topicR relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
