----- Mensaje original -----
> De: Tomas Bacigal <tom...@azet.sk>
> Para: "gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org"
> <gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org>
> CC:
> Enviado: lunes 14 de noviembre de 2011 10:55
> Asunto: Re: Negativ Layout in Gnome 3
>
> Hi all,
>
> I also miss the negative colours option in Gnome 3, since my eyes get
> rapidly tired staring at bright colours prevailing on
> desktop/webpages/documents.
> Already when Compiz was not able to invert newly opened window I was
> alarmed and looked for some permanent solution. On one forum I found a
> faint notion of a simple utility called xcalib. Just type
>
> xcalib -i -a
>
> to terminal or make shortcut on your desktop (or add to startup
> applications). It does not satisfy the need of inverting specific
> window, nor leaving out desktop background image, but it can save our
> eyes until the accessibility option is implemented in Gnome 3.
>
> Tomas
GNOME shell, the new interface used by GNOME 3 doesn't use compiz at all,
it uses mutter. So I guess if you are using the GNOME 3 fallback mode.
I recommend you to use a High Contrast theme (check the a11y icon in
gnome shell or in System Settings >Universal Access) and a High Contrast
Inverse GTK+ Theme (use the application gnome-tweak-tool or Advanced
Settings)
Evince, the document reader application, also has an inverted color built-in
option
that I think can be useful for you. AFAIK, you can also tweak your favorite
browser
for rendering pages with inverted colors (using a plugin, customized css, etc)
Cheers,
-- Juanjo Marin
PS: For GNOME 3.4 there are plans for better High Contrast themes and the
Magnification in GNOME Shell will include contrast Effects
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