1921
Physical dark mode
(startrek.website)
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Books with white pages don't emit light, a screen with white backgrounds does
It's like staring into a lamp.
It literally is.
I like to think of it as staring into a fire
I just put the brightness down
The sun at dusk will still burn your eyes.
I beg to differ 😎
https://youtu.be/X2LTL8KgKv8?si=3gelwovqgucFfyAM
Hah I love that song
Ask Trump about that, he knows better.
Checkmate libtard! (sorry)
Stare into the lamp and it'll stare back
Edit: also, u crazy, its just a lamp! —Ikea guy
Yep. And a soft, warm desk lamp is a lot easier in a dark room that a bright white one.
I've been reading a dark mode book on an OLED screen and it's such a treat. The background is pitch black but I crank the brightness up so there is a high contrast and the white letters look really sharp. It actually makes it easier to read
Unless it's an e-ink screen... then, it doesn't emit light
And these also don't need a dark mode.
They don't... But the option is still there if you want an emo-ink display
When you put it that way... Yes, yes I do.
I use my e-reader’s dark mode when I am reading in the dark and the backlight is on. So, in the one instance where it is actually emitting light.
Even with the "backlight" it's far less harsh than an LCD or OLED panel because it's not actually a back light, e-ink display have a "frontlight" that actually directs the light back at the display instead of from behind it facing outward towards the user
FYI ereaders don't emit light even with the light on. They use lights hidden on the sides under the bezels, and that light gets distributed above the screen using a kind of gel layer. The screen then reflects that light back.
Isn’t the device emitting light though, if not the screen itself? I don’t know if there is a technical definition of “emit” that is narrower, but I just meant that there is one time where the device itself is the brightest thing in the room and dark mode reduces that.
Yeah I guess that's fair, but I think that the fact that the light isn't directly shining in your eyes but is reflected, makes quite a difference. Still, use whatever mode feels most comfortable to you! Just sharing knowledge.
They do reflect it, though...
As someone with sensory issues, absolutely they do. I used to struggle so hard in school when I was supposed to stare at white paper in a well-lit room. I'm not sure if most people notice just how fucking bright paper can be xD
Yeah for whatever reason, textbook paper always has a glossy finish to it. Combine that with bright overhead fluorescent lights in a school and I could see how that could be irritating as fuck.
Other types of written material don't seem to have a glossy sheen like works of fiction and dictionaries. Do you still have issues with those or no?
I'm with you. I've been using invert colors before dark mode became cool. If only I could do it in real life...
That's it, downvote the guy even though he is right: https://www.pa.uky.edu/~sciworks/light/preview/color4aa.htm#:~:text=White%20objects%20look%20white%20because,wavelengths%3B%20the%20rest%20they%20absorb.
Because we know. That's how vision works. But it's missing the whole point. Would you rather get shot directly from a gun or from a ricochet?
Im waiting for someone to argue something about shrapnel vs clean wounds.
Depends, if I'm being executed I'd rather have the direct fire
Smh. There were two options, and flamethrower was not one of them /s
Not with that attitude.
Plus doing dark mode with a physical book requires a crap ton of ink - it would be very wasteful.
Everything refects lights, that's how our eyes see!
emit ≠ reflect
I think the point is that reflecting is ultimately just a form of emitting
it's possible to have harsh brightly lit white paper, as well as dim white screens