![]() ![]() The person who gave that idea should be fired and never allowed to work as a design advisor for anything other than has one telemetry setting and one crash reporter setting in its preferences pane, both can be disabled by unchecking the related boxes (two clicks in total). It took them more than 5 years (since it was also in Windows 8) to get the message that people don’t like flat, 2-colored icons that look straight up like placeholder icons for an internal pre-test NDA alpha build. Microsoft, again proved how flat UI can be ugly, displeasing and boring with Windows 8 and 10. It’s true that Microsoft picked a bad default theme for XP – that childish Crayon Blue, maybe the Silver theme should’ve been the default one, but I guess they wanted to get away from the gray color of the Classic theme before that… But that flat UI is just asking for trouble. I hope this stupid fad for flat design dies and we go back to gradients and gloss on UI like it was in XP/Vista/7. Opera made it even worse where they went as far as to make the address bar the same color as the rest, which makes the address look like it’s just floating there for no reason. One thing I hate about the new default theme of Google Chrome is that the idiots at Google removed the outline on the address bar making it blend in badly with the rest of the UI. That’s a good thing, because the basic gray (light/dark) theme of most Chromium browsers is really boring. Now You: Default theme or custom theme, what is your preference? (via Deskmodder, Techdows) Google does not like this at all and displays a notification to Edge users who visit the Chrome Web Store claiming that Chrome is more secure when it comes to the installation of these extensions. Users of the new Microsoft Edge web browser can install Chrome browser extensions and soon also Chrome themes from the official Chrome Web Store. Note that you may also disable the status of the experimental flag to uninstall the theme. To remove a custom theme, visit edge://settings/appearance in the browser's address bar and select "remove" next to custom theme. You will notice that themes will install fine in the Chromium-based Microsoft Edge browser.Ĭhrome, unlike Firefox, accepts only one custom theme installation and the same is true for the Chromium-based Microsoft Edge browser. Head over to the themes section of the Chrome Web Store to test the new functionality. Set the experiment to enabled using the menu on the right.Turn this on to allow themes from external web stores to be installed in Microsoft Edge. Allow installation of external store themes.Load edge://flags/#edge-allow-store-extension-themes in the browser's address bar the page should jump straight to the "Allow installation of external store themes" flag on the page.You can check for updates on edge://settings/help. Make sure that Microsoft Edge Canary is up to date.If tests are successful, options to install Chrome themes will come to other Microsoft Edge channels in the near future. The feature is not enabled by default and needs to be unlocked on the experimental flags page of the browser. Microsoft added a new option to the latest Canary build of its browser that allows users to install Chrome themes in Microsoft Edge. The process is not supported in current versions of Microsoft Edge. The installation would throw the error "An error has occurred" when trying to do so. Users of the new browser who tried to install themes from the Chrome Web Store noticed that this was not possible at the time. While it needs to be enabled in the browser's options, it is a straightforward process that unlocks Chrome's vast extensions store and the extensions it hosts. This is how Brave and other Chromium browsers behave (left), and how Firefox does (right).Microsoft's new web browser supported the installation of Chrome extensions from the day of launch. ![]() Open a website that supports prefers-color-scheme query, such as DuckDuckGo.Open Brave on a Linux system with light theme enabled.The patch can be seen here in case a similar solution is intended. One of the latest comments mentions a patch that a user has made, which solves the issue. I know this should be fixed upstream, but Google doesn't seem to care about it enough to justify the effort. This is a bug inherited from Chromium, and is being tracked here: If the option to use the "Gtk" theme is chosen, the Brave UI does respect the dark mode, however it doesn't set the prefers-color-scheme media query. On a Linux system, Brave has its own controls for light/dark mode, but it does not respect the system's overall theme. ![]()
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