As my eyes get old, I find myself switching away from dark mode...

I met dark mode quite early in #developer tools, #IDE, and instantly fell for it. Highlighting different bits of the source code with different colors makes it easier to interpret, dark mode made it easier to see the the color variation than regular mode.

This might be the reason why devs swapped early.

But the notion that this isn't good for our eyes feels more and more true the older my eyes get. Our ability to focus properly on "near objects" worsen with age, this is why progressive glasses are a thing, and "eye comfort" start to trump other things.

"Dark mode can cause accessibility issues" feels more and more true. I find I can lower brightness a lot more, or have a much higher "eyesaver" mode on the screen with light mode.

I find myself longing a bit for no backlight e-ink screens, but for anything else than ebook size, those are too pricey.

Anyway, point being, dark mode may not be as good for us as we think...

#DarkMode

@lettosprey I think people perceive light levels differently than others. I've always preferred dark mode and generally have trouble seeing things that are too bright, which is why I also prefer warm dim lighting indoors.

My wife is the opposite, she can't see things in the dark and likes lighting indoors to look like a hospital.

I've seen this variation in different people I've known. I think true accessibility means accounting for people's variations, which means having options of dark and light.

@norawibb @lettosprey Light coloured eyes get 100 times more light to their retina than brown eyes. I have light blue eyes and photophobia.

With age the lens also gets clouded.

I have dark mode everywhere browser extension, but I have to turn it off for more and more sites.

@rhelune @lettosprey i think i have the same extension, but if i turn it off, it's because it decided to screw up colors on charts or make the text dark too lol