Constant Brouerius van Nidek skreiv 08. juli 2017 06:52:
Momentarily I am working with LXQT as I found that it was easier on the eye than Plasma /KDE
Before I start trying out every possibility to improve readability I would appreciate some assistance from the experts.
KDE actually has several accessibility features (and accessibility is one of the main development areas for this year’s Randa meetings, https://randa-meetings.ch/). If you’re still willing to give KDE a chance, I would go to the KDE system settings and: – Enlarge all font sizes. Choose a nice, easy-to-read font. – Choose a high contrast colour scheme. – Choose a high contrast icon theme. – Choose a larger mouse pointer. – Explore the various ‘zoom’ desktop effects (there are three of them). In your browser, explore the various accessibility settings. In most browsers you can override fonts, override font sizes (or set a minimum font size) and override some or all colors (e.g., you can choose to have *all* text shown as black on pale yellow with a 20 pixels DejaVu Sans fonts). Explore the the various accessibility extensions available (see Jan Ritzerfeld’s post). If you’re using one of the proprietary graphics card drivers, take a look at the the available graphics settings available (e.g., for the NVidia drivers, launch the ‘nvidia-settings’ utility). There you can change the brightness, contrast, gamma and vibrance used for *all* applications, and which might make things easier to read. You might also want to take a look at the available settings for your monitor (i.e., on your *actual*, physical monitor). -- Karl Ove Hufthammer -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org