DisplayCAL (formerly known as dispcalGUI) might be a bit more popular than Stylus - User Styles Manager. We know about 50 links to it since March 2021 and only 47 links to Stylus - User Styles Manager. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
This happened in the middle of an apex legends session as soon as a new game had loaded and we were dropping - I switched tabs back into the game and found me view weirdly glitchy. I could see others moving around fine but I couldn't look anywhere smoothly. I had been messing around with my color settings in the control panel between games, and had also recently downloaded displayCAL from displaycal.net. I... Source: 10 months ago
You can test for this on any OLED display (including smartphones). Simply use a spectrometer or colorimeter, and an application such as displaycal. https://displaycal.net/. Source: 11 months ago
I've discovered just before something called https://displaycal.net/ ( a GUI front end) that uses the command line tools of https://www.argyllcms.com/ that support LOTS of calibration and spectrometer devices. Source: about 1 year ago
I assume your question about saturation refers to color management and calibration. If so, Gnome DE dedicates a whole page to this topic here at least in part backed by this project. Equally of relevance (and cross-platform) may be DisplayCal. Source: over 1 year ago
As for the specific monitors, 100% srgb isn't particularly difficult to find these days. AdobeRGB is probably the higher benchmark for photographic applications. I like how Rtings conducts their monitor reviews (Asus review here). I don't know how much of each color space your Macbook covers but calibrating them both with the same tool/process should give you very similar results between the two. I would recommend... Source: over 1 year ago
Both of these are hosted on userstyles.world. To use them, you'll need to have a browser extension like Stylus . Then just click the blue Install button for each tool you want! Source: 11 months ago
These are both hosted on userstyles.world. I recommend using them with the Stylus browser extension, which works on Chrome, Firefox (including Firefox Nightly for Android) and Opera. (Pretty sure it will also work with Cascadea if you're on Safari but I haven't tested it yet.). Source: 11 months ago
I wonder if Stylus would be good for this... Source: 12 months ago
If you don't have a userstyles extension installed, you can get one here for Firefox or Chrome, but for Safari you'll have to do some tweaking. Source: about 1 year ago
Though if you're in the habit of customizing sites you read, I'd personally recommend using a browser extension like Stylus (https://add0n.com/stylus.html) to do CSS, so you could write it like this:- Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago#wrapper {.
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