Re: ClearType & UI Font Question?

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You can turn off ClearType system-wide. Win XP and Vista have simliar methods...in general, right-click on the desktop, choose Properties, and from the "Appearance" tab, click on the "Effects" button. There you will see the option to turn off ClearType.

Tim

"Nona" <Nona@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:F197361E-EC45-49DA-A548-26228A056B57@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I have dyslexia, which effects my eyesight the worst. I have problems
reading certain colour arrangements (mainly black and white) and serif fonts.
This is why you often see dyslexics with coloured glasses or filters for
reading. Cleartype exentuates this problem making it near impossible for me
to read any text and moving my head closer to the screen, which works for
printouts and other paper resources doesn't work. I've tried every way of
disabling cleartype and my office options actually tell me it's disabled even
though it isn't, the only thing I haven't tried is deleting that font, but
shouldn't this be sorted as I would have thought they could get done under
the (British) DDA act.

"Melelina" wrote:


"Patrick Schmid [MVP]" <pdschmid@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:e1W$9CefHHA.3928@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> I had Office 2007 beta on XP Pro. I didn't like Office 2007 because I
>> detest gigantic icons so although I kept it for a long time, I seldom
>> used
>> it but it did honor my Verdana font and the sizes I have chosen for >> menu,
>> file, etc. At least it did for Word and that was the only part of >> Office
>> 2007 I used much (and I thought Word 2002 far superior because it >> doesn't
>> have gigantic icons and has neat drop down menus instead of making me
>> constantly switch screens back and forth). The GUI for Word 2007 is >> awful
>> but it did use Verdana. Verdana is the font I use for everything. I >> can't
>> read any other fonts easily.
> Are you running high contrast mode?
> I promise that the UI of Office 2007 certainly uses Segoe UI on XP and
> Vista. I don't know how you could have ended up using Verdana quite
> honestly. The Segoe font might have just looked like Verdana to you? > (It
> did evolve during the beta, so the final font is different from the > ones
> in the beta).
>
>> So, is this rigidity only for Vista? Are you saying if I got Vista I
>> could
>> not use Verdana as the UI font of my choice? I will not be able to get
>> Vista
>> if that is the case. This is an Accessibility issue if you are right!
>> Maybe I am misunderstanding because I cannot imagine Microsoft >> stopping
>> those of us with nonperfect eyesight from using the system font and >> font
>> size of our choice just because we get Vista! Surely you are not >> saying
>> that
>> one cannot change system fonts and font sizes in Vista in Display
>> Properties/Appearance/Advanced. How could that be? Windows Classic >> Style
>> is
>> still available isn't it? (Who would use anything else? I hate XP >> style
>> and
>> will hate Vista style I'm sure also. I want Classic style only). Are >> you
>> also saying that in Vista you cannot go into Display Properties and
>> change
>> the DPI?
> I am not saying anything about Vista. All I am saying is that Office > 2007
> uses Segoe UI. I haven't bothered upgrading to Vista yet, so I don't > know
> whether Windows Classic Style is still there. I wouldn't be surprised
> though, if it isn't.
>
> Patrick Schmid [OneNote MVP]
> --------------
> http://pschmid.net
> ***
> Office 2007 RTM Issues: http://pschmid.net/blog/2006/11/13/80
> ***
> Customize Office 2007: http://pschmid.net/office2007/customize
> RibbonCustomizer Add-In: http://pschmid.net/office2007/ribboncustomizer
> OneNote 2007: http://pschmid.net/office2007/onenote
> ***
> Subscribe to my Office 2007 blog: http://pschmid.net/blog/feed

No, I am not using High Contrast Mode. I use Display
>> Properties/Appearance/Advanced and the items in the drop down list >> such
>> as Menu, Message Box, Selected Items, Active Title Bar, etc. I set >> those
>> to Verdana and specific size Verdana font for each that is readable, >> and
>> for many of them like the address bar, I used Bolded otherwise even >> with
>> a larger font I can't read it without straining.

I like to use 98SE Desktop themes on XP and I have to overide the fonts and
font sizes for every theme.

I also beta tested IE7 and the reason I did was because Microsoft had
promised that it would give us Text Zoom like Firefox and Opera and
SeaMonkey have had for a long time. Microsoft's idea of Text Zoom was
nothing like what I have in Firefox, Seamonkey and Opera. But in these other
browsers, Text Zoom is somewhat passe anyhow because these browsers now give
us the ability to set a minimum default font size so I no longer need Text
Zoom.

I was so disappointed because their disregard for accessibility issues in
IE7 made it so that I couldn't use IE7 any better than I can IE6. My other
browsers allow me to set a default minimum font size. Then, for instance,
text in a text reply box on a forum is the same size as the text in the
forum messages. With IE, even IE7 with Text Zoom (which isn't really Text
Zoom as it is in Opera and Firefox), the text in a forum reply box is tiny.
I can read it, but I spend 10 hours a day on the computer and I would have
terrible headaches, burning eyes, etc. if I had to strain all day to read
what I was typing in the text box. That is just one example of how IE7 did
not deliver the promise that Microsoft gave us. I complained right away
after I got the beta and Microsoft told me they would fix it...but they did
not grasp the problem! They asked me which web sites had this problem!
Geez....it is all websites that have forum reply boxes have the problem
because it is an IE problem! It is not just text in text boxes either. IE
displays a web site with a variety of text sizes on the site and so Text
Zoom enlarges the text but the smallest text is still not enlarged enough
unless other text is gigantic. IE needs to allow the user to set a default
minimum text size as other browsers do so that all text on the web page is
the same readable size. This is a much better way to do it as then there is
no gigantic text on the page which happens in IE. And no matter what the
text zoom in IE nothing changes the size of the text in a text reply box
unless the rest of the page is such gigantic text that you can't read
anything else except the text reply box.

I kept the IE7 beta about three months and I couldn't use it so I went back
to IE6 and thanked my lucky stars that Firefox and Opera care about those of
us with less than perfect eyesight.

The irony to me with Office in particular is that I have no difficulty
making out small icons and I far prefer very small ones. I just can't read
small text on a flat panel digital LCD at 1280x1024. Even using Windows DPI
at 120 is not enough. I cannot use IE to read a web page (much less type in
a forum reply box) at 96 DPI even with IE set on "largest" for text. I can
set IE on "medium" or "large", depending on the web page, when using 120 DPI
and that is ok but IE doesn't enlarge all the text on the page big enough
(without enlarging other text too much) because I can't set a default
minimum text size. Why Microsoft cannot understand such a simple concept
(especially when all they need do is go look at their rival browsers) is
mind boggling.

I'll shut up now. I got off onto IE7 and this is a forum for Office.

>




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