![]() In the video below, TVI Jessica demonstrates the need for the Dark Reader extension and how Dark Reader can be used to invert the color when using Google Docs. Dark Reader does not show adds and does not send user’s data anywhere. A popular solution used by 5,000,000 people, is the free Dark Reader extension. Google Docs and other Google Suite applications are not compatible with the built-in dark mode settings. While some devices have reverse contrast and other brightness/contrast settings, these settings may not be compatible with all websites. Inverting the color (white text on black background) or adjusting the brightness, and using filters are ways to reduce eye strain. ![]() Many students with low vision are sensitive to screen brightness for some students, screen brightness will cause debilitating migraines. I’ve yet to find the perfect solution, but for the time being, this add-on will suffice.Struggling with the brightness or glare when using Google Docs or other websites? During the pandemic school closures, students are spending more time using technology to access and complete classroom assignments. Some developers hate the idea of users, modifying their web pages, in those circumstances, rewriting css files on the fly becomes difficult, and this probably places a significant restriction on the capability of the plugin, hence those odd pages which do not convert. ![]() Without this add-on it is an eye watering experience, and I can’t help thinking that, by turning down the brightness of the pixels, it has to contribute to extending the life of the monitor, as well as being more comfortable on the eyes. Why on Earth web developers feel the need to torture our eyes with acres of white space is completely beyond me. With each new version it does seem to get better, and more successful with the pages that previous versions could not convert. I’ve used this add-on with FF for a very long time now, and after trying most of the alternatives, found it to be the simplest and the best, even though it does not work on every single web page. I don’t use YouTube’s default Dark Theme because I block cookies for YouTube. LastPass Password Manager Firefox extension. Lastpass is an award-winning password manager, and this extension keeps your passwords both safe and accessible which may seem like a catch-22, but it isn’t. for YouTube, ‘YouTube DeepDark Material’ at brilliant, fast). For managing your passwords, we recommend the LastPass Firefox extension. YouTube, in which case I’ll prefer a dedicated CSS (i.e. What’s the purpose of phoning home for an extension which doesn’t rely on home data? Otherwise works nicely, I use it on a per-domain whitelist (off by default) mainly because some heavy sites are long to initialize with ‘Dark Theme’ applied, i.e. I had to create a dedicated rule to block it. The only thing I dislike with ‘Dark Reader’ is that it calls home () on every Firefox start. ‘Dark Background and Light Text’ is nice as well but if I remember correctly there is one page element which it does not handled specifically : the borders (I think those take the chosen text color) and IMO a no eye-strain dark page requires borders’ color to be far less bright than those of fonts, otherwise looks horrible on pages which carry many borders. I do use a dark theme extension and after having tried several I’m sticking on ‘Dark Reader’.
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