Carlos E. R. wrote:
The Wednesday 2007-10-10 at 13:15 -0500, suseROCKS wrote:
Thanks, I'll check them out. Yes I am using Gnome, but not sure what ally is.
a11y (not ally) is geek-speak for accessibility, like i18n is geek-speak for internationalization. (Hint: count the letters :)
I don't currently use any special devices. For me its more of a screen resolution issue. Things simply don't work well under 800x600 resolution, like Evolution, and there's so much tinkering I have to do with fonts all over the place when I leave it at 1024x768. Not my desired resolution.
In my ignorance, I have a question: wouldn't it better for you a larger resolution on a big, flat monitor, and then telling the system to use big fonts, or big everything, somehow?
I know that an 800x600 resolution yields big fonts and windows, simply because the programs seem to use the same number of pixels, and they overflow the available space, sometimes without a slider to display everything; but wouldn't it be better a bigger display? Perhaps the problem is that big enough displays are too expensive.
Bigger monitors are better of course but there are limits, especially on laptops. And setting the virtual screen resolution larger than the physical screen resolution so that you can pan around to see different parts of the screen can be useful in some circumstances. But adjusting font size is usually the most important technique. Carlos, you're correct that setting the screen to its full native resolution and then choosing appropriate font sizes is the way to get the best quality results. Sadly, it's a total pain in GNU/Linux. What the user wants is a single 'knob' or 'slider' that increases the size of all the fonts on the screen smoothly. Assuming the apps/graphics designers made sensible choices for relative sizes with their good eyesight, everything should scale reasonably well. But the current user experience is that there are multiple places where font sizes have to be adjusted, some just for individual applications, and some applications have no means to adjust some of the fonts. It's a real mess and has been so for far too long. Setting a lower screen resolution is a simple way of sidestepping all those problems and getting a usable display. But application and content designers are increasingly assuming higher minimum resolutions - often without any real need. They appear to think it's cool. Cheers, Dave -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org