Originally posted by crazycheese
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Missing Functionality From The Linux Graphics Drivers
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Originally posted by johnc View PostI think the important question here is... what kind of window theme is it that you're using there...? I'd like to give it a try.
But I just straight tell you about the problem it produces, I think it is general problem of darker themes. I think I wrap it in codebox, so its skippable...
Code:Default font is somewhat creme-white and background grey dark. So, here, right now, on phoronix, in *this edit box* I have white background(enforced by css?) with creme white font(as it should be). Hard to read... Somewhere I get reverse - darker background from theme(as it should be) and black(urgh) font(enforced by css?.) - impossible to read. I have blindly typed the text and doubleclicked to check Or pasted from editor.. I have tried to limit number of accessible colors within firefox. Even edited its config files, usually result was even worse. This problem is with Firefox only.. Maybe I work around it, when I have bit of time, or you have ideas?..
KWin compositing on
Window borders theme: Perfection, by scnd101 ; (within window decoration manager) window borders:large, buttons: normal, button layout a bit modified
Desktop theme: Elegance(standard one), with "panel background" from Ghost
Style: Oxygen (defines how buttons inside windows look, ie widget look)
Colorscheme: Obsidian Coast (main color scheme, that easy (on my) eyes grey)
Used gtk-theme-switch app to change gtk theme engine to qtcurve(found it most appealing), I think nvidia-settings uses gtk.
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Ahhh, thank you...!
I haven't checked out KDE since the '90s so now I see what I've been missing...
Yes, I like the dark themes but you're right, sometimes it can be hard to get all the apps to play nice and to get the contrast right (kinda stuck working with different grays, etc.).
I was thinking for Firefox maybe they have a theme add-on that would work for dark desktops? Not sure if CSS would respect that though.
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Huh, firefox does that too? IIRC the problem was much less on FF than in Opera, though neither handles dark themes properly. It's a shame they let css override the theme partially, they should detect black text on black / white text on white etc.
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Originally posted by crazycheese View PostNope, dualhead should just have its minimal base clocks limit rised. This detection could be done automatically.
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Originally posted by md1032 View PostThis would make "force minimum" force a higher power level than "adaptive" at idle, which doesn't make much sense. Also, what does dualhead have to do with it?
Dualhead, I mean double head, i.e two monitors active. Not the matrox adapter.
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