White background terminals harm my eyes.
I cant think on anybody spending lot of time on a white background terminal. Its anti natural.
As a funny note. All non-advanced users tell me that this black terminal have aome text they cant delete. (the prompt)
Looks like the plan9 terminal will be more usable or at least more logical to people not used to terminals.
Another point is that a friend of me who is a designer explained me the reason why white bg with black text is better for reading .. But I cant still realize this is a good reason.. Maybe i cant switch because i started typing on black terminals on 40x25 screens many years ago.
The first white bg terminal was on a apple quadra 650 running netbsd. It was the most painful experience with a slow framebuffer terminal. But managed to compile gdb after 3 days of compilation (most of the time was running the configure scripts..) but thats another story..
On 07/06/2011, at 18:01, Le Tian <tianeast_AT_gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 11:58 AM, Benjamin R. Haskell <suckless_AT_benizi.com> wrote:
> On Tue, 7 Jun 2011, Le Tian wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jun 7, 2011 at 11:25 AM, Connor Lane Smith wrote:
>
> [...] (I find inverting the colours actually helps to a worrying degree.)
>
>
> Interesting... Yeah, "I find inverting the colours actually helps to a worrying degree." I think this should be a default in all linux distros, due a phycological factor.)
>
> Inverting the colors = light text on dark background?
>
> And the dark background is less scary? I'd have expected the opposite, but maybe I've been conditioned by movies to think that dark terminals are 'leet'. To me, light backgrounds feel warmer and more natural, dark ones feel more cold and mechanical.
>
> --
> Best,
> Ben
>
> I thought he meant light background and dark font. This actually was implemented in opensuse, when I just started my journey with linux. Suse KDE konsole has light background by default. And it feels less tense I guess)
> --
> Tian
>
>
Received on Tue Jun 07 2011 - 19:09:25 CEST
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