Laptop LCD optimalization / Bytecode interpreter...
Hi List, Yesterday I decided to give a try for the bytecode-interpreter, and recompiled the freetype2 package from SUSE's .src.rpm on my laptop, just to see the difference it causes on my LCD panel. I have an Acer TravelMate 803LMiB running SUSE 9.1, and use now 1024x768; mostly with KDE, where in Control-Center antialiasing is turned-on with no limitations. RGB sub-pixel hinting is active. I did the procedure, and installed the newly made .rpm, but didn't see too much difference. On the desktop and on the top of the windows maybe the letters got well readable, but e.g. in OpenOffice.org I saw almost no difference. Actually what I supposed to see? Temporally I turned the anti-aliasing and sub-pixel hinting OFF, but then even with or without the byte-code interpreter most of the text got horrible in this case. Could you suggest me please a link, or howto, where optimalization for laptops/LCDs can be found?! I would appreciate even some user-friend info, why the above stuff would be good, and which combination of antialiasing/sub-pixel hinting/bytecode interpreter/something else (?) should give the nearly "optimal" results. Would it depend of the resolution/color depth/3D I use for my desktop, and would it effect something "else" as well, or only the fonts/text? Thanks a lot; sorry for the newbie questions. Peli Ps. I know about the legal terms, but being I decided to completely reinstall the stuff on my laptop in the next few days; just wanted to see, what I miss then in the future. At present I would see not soo much; but maybe I did something wrong...
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Peli