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Poor Contrast On New Windows 11 Laptop - Solutions?
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<blockquote data-quote="Sandpatch" data-source="post: 838038" data-attributes="member: 10543"><p>Thank you. I took a look, but found that "Contrast Themes" change or reverse colors to make tools such as Excel and Word easier to see. Each of the options produce a radically different screen not intended for adjustment. Sigh. There's also a tool to adjust text readability, but that doesn't help over screen contrast either.</p><p></p><p>I booted up my old laptop to compare screens and the old is better in contrast, but I also found that Windows 10, like Windows 11 has no general black contrast function. I wonder if screen engineering has changed to extend battery life or to cut costs? I read a post where someone described the screen as looking "washed out" and that's a pretty good description. Again, thanks for your suggestion.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sandpatch, post: 838038, member: 10543"] Thank you. I took a look, but found that "Contrast Themes" change or reverse colors to make tools such as Excel and Word easier to see. Each of the options produce a radically different screen not intended for adjustment. Sigh. There's also a tool to adjust text readability, but that doesn't help over screen contrast either. I booted up my old laptop to compare screens and the old is better in contrast, but I also found that Windows 10, like Windows 11 has no general black contrast function. I wonder if screen engineering has changed to extend battery life or to cut costs? I read a post where someone described the screen as looking "washed out" and that's a pretty good description. Again, thanks for your suggestion. [/QUOTE]
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Poor Contrast On New Windows 11 Laptop - Solutions?
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