On 19-05-12 20:29:53, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
...
In how many places you need to resize the fonts, to have everything
appear correctly? Do you use apps from both the Gnome and KDE world
simultaneously (I do)? It seems to me that setting one slider is far
easier than manually resizing a whole bunc
On 13May2019 02:29, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
On Mon, 13 May 2019 08:54:36 +1000
Cameron Simpson wrote:
Doesn't scaling your display inherently involve blurring the stuff
rendered on it?
In my case, not visibly, no. My 3200x1800 scaled up 1.5 times on a
15-inch laptop display looks just great.
On 5/12/19 10:00 AM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
Any better experience if using XOrg in Fedora 30 with these kind of
displays resolutions and dimensions?
I haven't used it, but an Xorg solution is listed here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/HiDPI#Fractional_Scaling
_
On Mon, 13 May 2019 08:54:36 +1000
Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 12May2019 19:00, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
> >having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora
> >30, I see
> >that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with
> >too small fonts ans duch in my opinion)
On 12May2019 19:00, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30, I
see
that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with too
small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead appears as too
big).
[...]
Not a solution to
On Sun, 12 May 2019 19:00:32 +0200
Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
> having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30,
> I see that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders
> with too small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead
> appears as too big).
[snip
Hello,
having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30, I see
that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with too
small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead appears as too
big).
The laptop is dual boot and I see that the Windows 10 set by defa