![]() ![]() Changes are being rolled out gradually, with changes coming with each twice-yearly update to the OS. The changes have brought new 3D elements, as well as more light, depth, motion, and the UI elements scale to remain usable across different devices. In terms of design Windows 10 initially lacked the clean modern look of macOS, but since it was launched in 2015 it’s had a design refresh – known as the Fluent Design System – bringing more animations, translucency and blurring elements (known as Acrylic) that are supposed to make it feel like the design elements of Windows seem like they are behaving like objects in the real-world would. For example, previously the Dock had a 3D look, but now it’s flat with transparency, and as a result looks simpler and more modern. Several interface elements were flattened back in Yosemite. So, for example, in Safari the three buttons are on the same level as the next/previous button and the address/search bar. In Yosemite Apple moved the traffic light buttons for close, minimise and full screen mode onto the same level so that the height of the window title bar could be cut. For example, you can hide the Dock, or move it to the side, or hide the menus at the top of the screen. There are also various design touches that make the most of a small display. Dark Mode makes the Mac interface a little more comfortable to use at night or in a dark editing studio, for example. But as of Mojave you can overhaul the whole interface to use a darker, more muted colour scheme systemwide. Previously macOS only allowed you to darken the menu bar at the top of the screen as well as the drop down menus that appear from that, and the Dock. Place them in /System/Library/CoreServices/SystemAppearance.bundle/Contents/ResourcesĪND MAKE A BACKUP OF THE ORIGINAL FILES! I didn't backup mine, so I have nothing to revert to from this theme (which isn't much of a problem to me) But I strongly advice to keep a backup incase things go wrong.Other features include a Dark Mode that was introduced in Mojave (shown above). car file meant for High Sierra on my Mac before, and there were a lot of graphical glitches, such as button not being centered, and text not being inside boxes, but icons and the windows traffic lights were perfect. They could work with High Sierra or Catalina, but certainly not earlier or later versions than that. If you are running macOS Mojave, then these files should work great. Now, this depends on your macOS Version, and I cannot guarantee that the ones I'm giving you are absolutely 100% flawless/compatible with your version. To add the Snow Leopard theme, uncompress it, open cDock, select "Import" and choose the FOLDER, not the contents of the folder.Īnd last, but not least, the scary part: Replacing SystemAppearance.car and Assets.car. Īnd to change the icons, download LiteIcon: Īnd here are the icons: To change them, simply drag the desired icon to the wanted app.Īnd the Leopard dock theme, because the one included is kind of ass in my opinion Download this, and open it, and you should get a battery icon similar to mine. I already used the app before, so that was useful. Then, for the menu bar, download Menu Bar Tint: And for the menu bar battery icon, I modified a version of the app, "Battery Guard" from the App Store. So for the system font, download this: press "Lucida Grande" and press the green check, and restart. ![]() In Terminal, type csrutil disable, then restart. Number one: Disable SIP: Restart your Mac while holding COMMAND+R, press Utilities, then Terminal. ![]()
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