instead use the Fonts settings in KDE's System Settings panel (under Look & Feel -> Appearance).
I tried ALL options I found in that section. - Go to Configure Desktop > Appearance > Fonts - Set Use anti-aliasing to Enabled - Click Configure - Check Use sub-pixel rendering and set Hinting style to Full This may have produced a minor increase in sharpness of the characters associated with icons etc. YET, if I were ever be able to actually work with Linux, I would not stare 10 hours a day at icons, but at the text area of word processors, spread sheets, browsers, dictionaries etc. As far as I can tell NOTHING in the display has changed here. Fonts using alphabet are somewhat better, but all fonts Linux installed when I added a secondary language (here Japanese) are simply blurred. Does that mean that it is under Linux not possible to produce a clear, sharp rendering of the text on the screen? If that is so, does EVERYBODY (except me) finds this normal and acceptable? Somehow I prefer to think, that is not the case and there must be some way to achieve a "clear picture" .... -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org