Jason Cook
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Options to set custom colors is critical for people who have vision problems, as important as being able to set font size so it's readable for those with poor vision. Web links no longer add images, important also for those with poor vision or reading on a small display like a phone who perhaps don't have ability to expand screen size to read tiny text or be able to hit a thin line of text with large hands/fingers.
When adding images, there is no context menu to control size of image as was before.
Someone obviously didn't test the changes on various types of display such as CRT, phone screen, plasma, etc for compatibility. Not everyone is going to waste hundreds of $ on a new iPhone every **** time a new one comes out to extract more money from the gullible although I'm sure that was the baseline for testing. That's the purpose of being able to set custom colors/contrast: to fit the display and person's vision and also the conditions under which one is trying to read. "One display setting fits all" is oblivious to the real world conditions under which real people who don't spend all day in a room with artificial lighting exist and work.