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Styles
This style swaps the "Open in New Tab" and "Open in New Window" options in Firefox 4 to match the order they were in in Firefox 3 - that is, the New Window option is listed first rather than the New Tab option.
This is a style to recreate the style of the LiveJournal site that was present during Halloween 2007. Note that this style will NOT do anything on its own; it requires the 'LJ Skins: Class Adder' script from userscripts.org to work as LJ does not yet allow easy identification of site schemed pages. This script can be found at http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/10190 ; please see that link for more information on the script itself. For more skins like this, check out the 'ljskins' community on LiveJournal: http://community.livejournal.com/ljskins/
LiveJournal recently released from beta a new site scheme called "Vertigo", and will not by default show options for the old "Dystopia" and "XColibur" themes any longer, as they are old and not supported any longer. As I'm a die-hard Dystopia user, but at the same time wanting something a little more kept up-to-date, I decided to roll a set of CSS changes to make the Vertigo site scheme look more Dystopia-ish. The original version of this style was LJ: Visions - a Dystopic Vertigo (with ljvertigo), but this was made while Vertigo was still in beta, and it now no longer works. This new version works on Vertigo v2, which is the released version. Note that this style will NOT do anything on its own; it requires the 'LJ Skins: Class Adder' script from userscripts.org to work as LJ does not yet allow easy identification of site schemed pages. This script can be found at http://userscripts.org/scripts/show/10190 ; please see that link for more information on the script itself. For more skins like this, check out the 'ljs
This style, in my opinion, makes the new style of thedailywtf.com (formerly worsethanfailure.com, formerly thedailywtf.com (yes, they renamed back)) *much* more readable by changing colours to contrast better, adding borders where needed and changing margins and padding so elements fit better together. In particular, it colours nested comments appropriately up to four levels deep; I haven't seen any comments that use more nested comments than that but any that do will retain the darkest colour. And besides, the borders are much easier to see anyway.