Netscape problems (fwd)
Derek Martin
dmartin at LanCity.COM
Wed Oct 20 16:31:20 EDT 1999
On Wed, 20 Oct 1999, Niall Kavanagh wrote:
> One way to get around the tiny font problem is to use one of the truetype
> font servers out there along with your windows fonts. If you don't use
> windows at all, microsoft has kindly put a "web font pack" on their website
> for download.
<SARCHASM>Boy, I feel ingratiated! THank GOD for Microsoft! :)
</SARCHASM>
Yes - I know this is an option, but this is a problem infrequently enough
for me that it isn't worth the effort, though some people may be more
inclined to care.
> The problem isn't netscape (though it's unwillingness to abide by the user's
> preferences is somewhat perplexing?), it's XFree86. It's horrible with
> fonts! Fortunately there are truetype font servers available (check on
> freshmeat.net), and it's being addressed for XFree86 4.0.
Well, this is a problem on all implementations of the X Window System that
I know of, and I'm not even going to attempt to get TrueType fonts working
on a production Solaris or HP box... also not worth the effort, especially
if I royally screw up, which I've been known to do a time or two... :)
> I suppose we could point a finger at the web page authors for not doing some
> simple tests to see what their pages look like under other operating
> systems, but in this case it's somewhat hopeless. Depending on what the end
> user's preferences are, they can easily muck up a well designed page. I've
> been a lot happier with netscape since I started using truetype fonts under
> X.
Agreed... there's no need to blame US (User Stupidity) on the web
developers, but the converse is true also... Someone with a reasonably
sane configuration (for their own environment) should be able to read web
pages, and the fact is some web pages are designed in such a way to make
this very difficult. Ever try reading planetquake's web page from a Unix
Netscape client? Break out the fresnel lenses!
> Side note... using relative font sizes in HTML (<font size="-1">) is FAR
> better than setting absolute sizes (<font size="1">). A relative size tells
> the browser to go "-1" down from the user's preference, where as the
> absolute is just that... an absolute size that may not even be legible in
> the user's browser.
Agreed... I know what they do... but you should know that!
*******************************
| Derek D. Martin |
| UNIX System Administrator |
| derek.martin at ne.arris-i.com |
*******************************
-
Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with
"subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the
message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
More information about the Discuss
mailing list