I'm sure there are some crappy legacy applications that would break with dark mode forced upon them, but I can't imagine there are many of these still in use by your average user that cares about using light or dark mode (which again, could be "fixed" with a blacklisting system). The Android/MIUI thing was an example - as in it lets you blacklist individual applications if they don't play nicely with the black theme. Almost.īut it's just not something that they have enough control over to actually implement perfectly It's almost as good as just running KDE in darkmode. You cannot compare the two.Īnd the simple excuse is, it takes time and it's less popular than the default.ĭude stop being defensive about something you have no control over. There is NO universally workable way to enforce a dark mode across the whole OS on windows because they made some different choices early on in Windows that things like Linux/Unix/MacOS(back when it was System 5/6/7/8) didn't go with. You force a change externally and they'll override it right back. Especially applications that manage their UI elements with a helper. You have no idea what terrors I've seen hiding inside applications. Forcing the color of an object could literally break some applications. No they can't blanket force theming for a variety of reasons. Good enough, isn't good enough for enterprise. The Task manager thing could again be due to the fact that the theme is technically for 20H2, and honestly I didn't even notice it before you pointed it outĪnd you argument also doesn't account for all the stock Windows applications like Run, Control Panel, Task Manager etc, which honestly have absolutely zero excuse to not have a dark mode implemented for them It works good enough for most applications, since most of them pick the colors from the pallette Windows gives them, meaning they just translate over (like with older Windows versions that allowed you to customise the colors for all UI elements).Īnd for those few applications that have stubborn elements, an implementation done at the OS level that's more aggressive would totally be possible, for example Xiaomi phones have a feature that can force dark mode on applications that don't naively support it (it works pretty well, and also allows you to blacklist an application if it breaks the UI) While this theme certainly isn't perfect (which could really also be the fact that it's technically for 20H2), it's still heaps better than Microsoft's implementation.
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