El 19/02/2020 a las 22:40, Cuddle Beam via agora-business escribiΓ³:
I don't find this overly obscure, because it's fairly easily readable. This is normal English, but in a cool font. It says "Judicial Jocularity Act". "Judicial Jocularity Act" and "π₯ππΉπΎπΈπΎπΆπ π₯ππΈπππΆππΎππ ππΈπ" are the same thing but written in different fonts, and the font used is not relevant for differences between titles (as long as it is reasonably understandable). I judge TRUE
Remark: For screen reader speech users (like me) it may be rendered as: fine (but maybe each character prefixed with "math symbol", and / or spelled out), assuming the screen reader or the synthesizer recognizes the symbols in question, or the user has configured the reader accordingly by adding the symbols manually; as nothing at all; or as a collection of Unicode Hex values preceded by "symbol" each time. I experience the three cases depending on which screen reader and synthesizer combination I choose. Braille users are probably out of luck here, as they'll probably onlhy see the Unicode hex values (will test later if you are interested). I wonder why these symbols aren't made equivalent with the latin letters in screen readers,Β braille tables and synthesizers. Oh well.