Dark Reader is a free browser extension available for Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox. It lets you apply a dark color scheme to any website so that you can enjoy browsing your favorite websites at night or in the dark. The extension is available in respective extension stores and can be quickly installed to any of the browsers mentioned above.
Instantly reach the people in your life—for free. Messenger is just like texting, but you don't have to pay for every message (it works with your data plan).
We use GitHub a lot and notice many annoyances we'd like to fix. So here be dragons.
Our hope is that GitHub will notice and implement some of these much needed improvements. So if you like any of these improvements, please email GitHub support about doing it.
GitHub Enterprise is also supported. More info in the options.
This Chrome™ extension changes page colors, brightness and contrast to increase readability and brings dark night mode to the world wide web. ✔ Inverts brightness instead of colors ✔ Improves readability ✔ Blue filter replaces blue light with red ✔ Activation and deactivation schedule ✔ User can add new themes ✔ Free forever
On GitHub, no matter what kind of file is, their icons are all same. However, in your fancy editor, there are some packages which make it energetic. Therefore, I build a simple extension to replace original file icon with file-specific icons. This improves visual recognition on GitHub. Cheers!
Night Mode for Desktop allows you to save your eyes when using Twitter when it's dark out. Twitter introduced Night Mode to mobile last year and now they are finally bringing it to desktop.
Stylus is a fork of Stylish that can be used to redesign the web. The objective in creating Stylus was to remove any and all analytics, and return to a more user-friendly UI. This is why we named the extension with an "us" ending, as in the actual users.
GitHub's theming options are a bit lacking, and staring at the same bland dark color scheme can make you wonder, what if there's more. Pint for GitHub resolves that by providing you control over the way GitHub looks like. Did I mention it's free and OSS?
See outline of code on Github - functions, classes and interfaces used in the code. Clicking scrolls to the corresponding line in code. Currently only works for Java, Javascript and Typescript.