Thanks for these, Mark.

I find it interesting that CNET is suggesting for sighted folks ways to use 
Accessibility settings for enhanced use of their iDevices.

It reminds me of sighted co-workers jealous of my keyboard accessibility on my 
PC when they were being slowed down by the requirement to move off the keyboard 
and use the mouse for multiple things. Of course, they were faster than me in 
many ways, but they did like the convenience of keyboard navigation when it was 
available.

Keith

-----Original Message-----
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
M. Taylor
Sent: Sunday, July 02, 2017 9:08 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: How to enable iOS 11's hidden dark mode - CNET

CNET How To - Thursday, June 29, 2017 at 2:53 PM

How to enable iOS 11's hidden dark mode - CNET Matt Elliott/CNET iOS 11 
introduces a display setting that inverts some but not all of the colors on 
your device. iOS has long had a setting to invert the colors on your device, 
but now it has a smarter invert option that leaves photos, videos and other 
elements alone. It's the closest thing you'll find to a dark mode for your 
iPhone or iPad.
Head to Settings > General > Accessibility > Display Accommodations > Invert 
Colors and toggle on Smart Invert. (You'll notice that the old invert option is 
now labeled Classic Invert.) With Smart Invert enabled, you'll immediately see 
that the background for Settings app turns black but the toggle switch 
background color remains green instead of turning purple like it does with 
Classic Invert. The app icons also remain unchanged. Open the Photos app and 
you'll see a similar effect -- the background is black but the photos are left 
alone so they don't look like photo negatives. Also, Smart Invert is smart 
enough to keep its hands off an app with a dark background, such as the Clock 
app.
Meanwhile, on your home screen, your device's wallpaper doesn't get inverted 
but the dock at the bottom does and the white text at the top turns black. 
What do the aforementioned apps have in common? Yep, they're all from Apple.
Smart Invert is less smart with third-party apps. Instagram and YouTube, for 
example, are rendered useless with Smart Invert because the colors for photos 
and videos on each app are inverted and look crazy. Same for news apps such as 
Huffington Post, The New York Times and Newser, but Apple's News app looks just 
fine with Smart Invert. Like the Clock app, Spotify has a black background, but 
because it's not made by Apple, its background turns white and album art 
exhibits insane, inverted colors with Smart Invert.
Perhaps Smart Invert will get smarter when the final version of iOS 11 is 
rolled out this fall, but for now it's best used sparingly. You aren't likely 
going to drill down into the Settings app to enable it for use with a 
particular app, only to then head back to Settings to turn it off again.
Thankfully, you can set an Accessibility shortcut for Smart Invert that will 
let you triple-click the Home button to toggle it on and off. To set up the 
shortcut, go to Settings > General > Accessibility, scroll all the way to the 
bottom to Accessibility Shortcut and select Smart Invert Colors. That's the 
smartest way to use Smart Invert for my money.
Read more: All the tips, tricks and new features of iOS 11 
https://www.cnet.com/how-to/how-to-enable-ios-11s-hidden-dark-mode/#ftag=CAD
5457c2c



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