Hi,

wirelessduck--- via Dng <dng@lists.dyne.org> writes:

>  On 20 Jan 2022, at 23:33, Hendrik Boom <hend...@topoi.pooq.com> wrote:
>
>  It's nice if the desktop colours look good on a perfectly calibrated monitor.
>  But what's more important for it to look good on the variety of monitors
>  regular users use.
>  So we should test the imagery on the ordinary, everyday laptops and
>  monitors we have at home and work.
>  And it's important the the colours work even if one is colourblind.
>  I'd suggest viewing it converted to greyscale as a first try at testing
>  this, bt a friend of mine who is colourblind tells me it's far more
>  complicated than this.
>
>  -- hendrik
>
> Can I suggest Color Oracle or similar as a tool to use here?
>
> https://colororacle.org/
>
> It allows you to apply a full screen filter to simulate what a colour
> blind person would be seeing if they were viewing your monitor. It is
> a Java app and I’ve only tested it on Windows some years ago but it
> does say Linux compatible, with a link to source code on GitHub.

Web developer tools for Firefox and Chromium should also contain tools
to simulate colour blindness and some other visual impairments.  I have
played around with a tool for Chromium a while back but don't remember
it's name.

Hope this helps,
--
Olaf Meeuwissen                    FSF Associate Member since 2004-01-27
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