On Thu, Mar 19, 2015 at 4:10 PM, Andy Bradford <
amb-sendok-1429395023.fedjmknnbjlmkfmlh...@bradfords.org> wrote:

> Thus said Scott Robison on Thu, 19 Mar 2015 14:26:47 -0600:
>
> > The additional problem with color vision deficiency is that even if we
> > found a  set of colors  that I  could always differentiate  and always
> > rely on,  who knows if other  color deficient people would  see it the
> > same way I do.
>
> Hopefully these types of things all end up as CSS configurable.
>

True, though given the variable nature of branches across projects it
doesn't seem like something one would completely control via CSS (unless
you just mean USE COLOR vs USE BLACK). If the branch color was used, we do
have the ability to go change the branch color to something more to our
liking. The problem is not the ability to change colors, we more or less
have that already. It is the fact that not everyone coming into a project
will be able to see the colors selected for project X. The estimates are
that over 4% of the total population (8% men, 0.5% women) have it.

Please understand: I'm not demanding anything in particular be done to
accommodate, just raising the consideration. I just don't want the fossil
ecosystem to devolve into something horrid like MySpace. :)

-- 
Scott Robison
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