Short: ViNCEd Themes Author: nyteshade@gmail.com (Brielle Harrison) Uploader: nyteshade gmail com (Brielle Harrison) Type: util/shell Version: 1.0 Requires: util/shell/ViNCEd Architecture: generic Distribution: Aminet Here are a collection of themes that have been converted from iTerm2 themes. iTerm2 is a macOS Terminal app that is very popular on that platform. I wanted some of the varied themes that one finds for that app on my Amiga (>32 colors to be safe; not tested on machines with screens with fewer colors). ViNCEd uses 16-bit RGB values and some of its preferences are a bit difficult to grok if you open the prefs file and expect to find 8-bit hexadecimal or integer values for RGB. These themes have all been converted to a format that makes sense for ViNCEd. The script that does the conversion is open source and the latest version can be found on a public GitHub gist: https://gist.github.com/nyteshade/87a2d2c37275f9f61ddcf722b14f1200 The script is also included here, though it should be run in a console on a machine that supports Google Chrome. Installation: Each theme file has a url to an image that you can preview to understand what the colors should look like. Once you've chosen one you want, open the file ENV:ViNCEd.prefs and locate the section with the comment ";Colors:". After that, copy the lines that look similar from the theme file into the ViNCEd.prefs file and save. The next time you open your terminal, those colors should be in effect. If they are not, you may need to open the Settings when ViNCEd is running or type "SetVNC" manually. Find the 3rd (of 4) page under the Edit tab. Ensure that "ANSI colors as default" is selected and tap Use. Once you have the theme you like, open Settings again and click on the Save button or manually copy the ENV:ViNCEd.prefs file to ENVARC: Enjoy! P.S. There are a lot of comments in the JavaScript source file that explain how the process works. In short, it basically grabs the pixel colors from the sample images directly and creates a textual output that can be saved to a file. I did this with the handful of themes included in this archive.