▲ | amelius 4 days ago | |
Ok, in the Apple world choosing design over functionality is quite normal, I guess. Maybe things should work differently there. I don't know because I don't use Apple hardware and actually try to avoid it. Anyway, I don't think that changing fonts on different displays is really a problem. If you're reading a book and a magazine, then switching between the two will also cause the fonts which you see to switch, and it's not like your brain has any trouble with it. Basically, your brain can quickly and easily get comfortable with the idea of looking at A and seeing font 1, and looking at B and seeing font 2. | ||
▲ | Kwpolska 3 days ago | parent [-] | |
I went to dell.com, looked at laptops, and the first laptop they showed me [0] has this:
This is absolutely unusable at 100% scale. Windows probably defaults to something between 150% and 200%, and probably on the further end of the scale. And if you don’t want crisp fonts, the alternative [1] is:
Windows defaults to 125% scale on screens like this. 100% is not comfortable at typical viewing distances.[0] https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/dell-laptops/dell-16-plus-la... [1] https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/dell-laptops/dell-16-laptop/... |