(Previous posts: [1], [2], [3], [4])
GreaterWrong.com has just added several new features and UI enhancements:
Modern Less Wrong theme
There is now a new theme (bringing the total to nine themes to choose from), called “Less”. (This theme is inspired by the design of the new, i.e. current, Less Wrong site.)
Here’s how it looks on a desktop:
And on a phone:
(See the About page for how to switch themes.)
Mobile theme tweaker
The theme tweaker feature (which lets you do things like invert colors—instantly creating a “dark mode” version of any theme—as well as adjust brightness, contrast, saturation, and hue) is now available on mobile devices.
Open the theme selector (gear button in the lower-left of the screen), and then tap this button:
And you’ll see the theme tweaker screen:
(See the About page for more on the theme tweaker.)
Strong vote display
Strong upvotes and downvotes now display properly on GreaterWrong, in all themes.
(Themes, starting from top left and going across by row: default, grey, ultramodern, zero, brutalist, rts, classic, less.)
Alignment Forum view
Click the “AF” icon next to any Alignment Forum post, and you’ll be taken to a listing of all the Alignment Forum posts.
The italic variant of the font used for body text in the "Less" theme -- I think it's Source Serif Pro -- has a very strange behaviour for me, at the moment, on my laptop running Windows 10. Here is a screengrab at 170% size in Firefox. Look at the serifs and at lowercase "t" and "f"! (And, I guess, everywhere where two strokes somehow run into or across one another.)
If I crank the zoom up one notch more to 200% then the weirdness goes away. In Chrome, it's weird up to 150% size but normal from 175% up. (My laptop has a "4k" screen, with Windows' global scaling set to 200%.)
This seems like it must be a text-rendering bug, but I've never seen it happen before; I guess something in the Source Serif Pro font is triggering it.