On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 03:21, Felix Miata <mrma...@earthlink.net> wrote: > On 2009/10/11 00:03 (GMT+0200) Remco composed: > >> On this setup, with the correct DPI set, 10pt looks *huge*. 9pt is >> still too much for my tastes. 8pt feels very natural. > > And without leaning forward you can touch the screen with your elbow too, > right? And over 55? :-) I can't even come close with my fingertips. :-p
I'm not over 55, but I do have 1-2dpt nearsightedness. This means I can't use Ubuntu 9.04 by default. Even 10pt won't do on a 133 DPI system that tries to be a 96 DPI system. But if by fixing that, Ubuntu will by default be using 1/7th of an inch for each letter... that is way out of proportion. That's for people with an actual visual disability. In my nearsighted situation, but with a correctly set DPI, I can read 8pt text comfortably when it is 60-70 centimeters away from my eyes. I'm not saying that Ubuntu shouldn't be accessible by default. I think that would be a great idea. But accessibility settings have a strong impact on the user experience. One size certainly doesn't fit all. And this particular accessibility setting is difficult to disable. I can assure you that the font settings is about the scariest place of Ubuntu configuration. And it requires 5 navigation steps: System > Preferences > Appearance > Fonts tab > Details. This is *very* hard to find. Any accessibility feature should be easy to find, but it should also be easy to turn off. So, to ultimately fix all aspects of this, I would really like a future Ubuntu where: * text to speech is activated by default * speech to text is activated by default * the DPI is set 10 dots higher than the physical DPI * a high-contrast theme is used by default This would mean Ubuntu would be usable -- out of the box -- by the blind, the illiterate (including young children), the nearsighted, the farsighted, the people with limited motor functions... the whole lot. And since nobody would want to use the system with all of those options enabled at the same time, an important aspect of this would be a welcoming screen that would make it easy to turn any of these options off. This kind of in-your-face presentation of features should not be used for anything besides accessibility, of course. >> Screenshots: >> 10pt: http://www.few.vu.nl/~rkg230/files/Screenshot10pt.png >> 9pt: http://www.few.vu.nl/~rkg230/files/Screenshot9pt.png >> 8pt: http://www.few.vu.nl/~rkg230/files/Screenshot8pt.png > > 10pt is the best of the lot here: http://fm.no-ip.com/SS/SC/sc-remco47a.png For you, maybe. ;) -- Remco -- Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list Ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-devel-discuss