Most accessibility problems aren't things that those without some sort of sensory disability (beyond mild long-sightedness) can detect easily - at least, without using tools to do so.
Surely though there is some sort of "accessible" mode you can put it into that does improve the contrast?
Most accessibility problems aren't things that those without some sort of sensory disability (beyond mild long-sightedness) can detect easily - at least, without using tools to do so.
Surely though there is some sort of "accessible" mode you can put it into that does improve the contrast?