On Wed, 29 Apr 2015 12:25:18 +0200 Juergen Stuber juer...@jstuber.net wrote:
On Wed, 29 Apr 2015 12:05:20 +0200
Martin Pitt mp...@debian.org wrote:
As a daytime worker I also use a white background, but the colors
(black, green, and red) are readable very well on it.
I use a light gray
On Sat, 2 May 2015 09:51:36 +0200 Juergen Stuber juer...@jstuber.net wrote:
On Sat, 2 May 2015 02:41:19 +0200
m...@linux.it (Marco d'Itri) wrote:
On Apr 29, Juergen Stuber juer...@jstuber.net wrote:
I use a light gray background, so green becomes completely
unreadable.
I checked the
On Sat, 2 May 2015 02:41:19 +0200
m...@linux.it (Marco d'Itri) wrote:
On Apr 29, Juergen Stuber juer...@jstuber.net wrote:
I use a light gray background, so green becomes completely
unreadable.
I checked the attached image and I can read it well on a business
matte LCD.
Maybe the
On Apr 29, Juergen Stuber juer...@jstuber.net wrote:
I use a light gray background, so green becomes completely unreadable.
I checked the attached image and I can read it well on a business
matte LCD.
Maybe the settings for your screen should be tuned?
Are your eyesight and colors perception
On Wed, 29 Apr 2015 12:05:20 +0200
Martin Pitt mp...@debian.org wrote:
As a daytime worker I also use a white background, but the colors
(black, green, and red) are readable very well on it.
I use a light gray background, so green becomes completely unreadable.
Apart from that I generally
Package: systemd
Version: 215-17
Severity: normal
Dear Maintainer,
the default colors of systemctl output are unreadable in my terminals,
where I use a light background. I tried to set LogColor=no in
/etc/systemd/system.conf and /etc/systemd/user.conf , but that didn't
help.
IMHO the default
Hello Juergen,
Juergen Stuber [2015-04-29 11:19 +0200]:
the default colors of systemctl output are unreadable in my terminals,
where I use a light background.
As a daytime worker I also use a white background, but the colors
(black, green, and red) are readable very well on it. Do you happen
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