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Dark Mode has been available in the mobile Wikipedia app for iOS and Android for a while now, and now it's available for the web interface. I've had this option for several weeks now, but some of ...
Dark Reader will analyze the web pages of each site you visit will switch any bright colors to darker ones. On some browsers, such as Firefox, you can change the brightness, contrast, sepia and ...
Now, whenever you're browsing a site that offers Simplified view, you'll be prompted to turn it on (this is pretty great for reading long articles, even if you don't care about dark mode). Then ...
If you use Safari on iPhone, the easiest way to enable dark mode on any website is by using Reader. This mode hides ads, navigation menus, and other elements, making websites easier to read.
Dark mode is more critical than ever in the age of HDR and OLED, so why don't more major sites and services offer it? Here's how our computing editor avoids getting blinded in 2023.
Dark mode seems to be here to stay. Initially, it was mainly used by developers in their code editors. Now, it’s all over the place: mobile, desktops, and now even the web.
Dark Reader allows you to change any website to dark mode, but it does come with some drawbacks. It didn’t work so well on LinkedIn, so I turned it off.
What the Wikipedia website looks like in dark mode on the mobile web. Image Credits:Screenshot by TechCrunch In August 2024, Wikipedia finally rolled out dark mode to the desktop site.
But now dark mode website abilities are coming to Google's Chrome, Microsoft's newly overhauled Edge and Apple's Safari on iPhones and iPads. Dark modes are a hot item these days.
Basically, Dark Reader turns dark mode on for every website you visit on Safari. Once you install the Dark Reader from the Mac AppStore, you will be asked to turn it on under Safari Extensions.