It is on the news story pages, but not the homepage. Strangely enough though, 
the small font size in the stories is bigger than the default size on the home 
page.

Geoff

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Felix Miata
> Sent: Thursday, 10 November 2005 2:39 PM
> To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
> Subject: Re: [WSG] Font resizing
> 
> 
> Andreas Boehmer [Addictive Media] wrote Thu, 10 Nov 2005 
> 14:08:40 +1100:
>  
> > I just realised how ridiculously little the difference is 
> between "normal"
> > and "large" font size on the Sydney Morning Herald. As if 
> that was making
> > any difference to the user. It's fairly obvious that that 
> was only put on
> > there for the show, not to really make any difference.
> 
> It this the site in question? http://www.smh.com.au/
> 
> I opened it in a 900x700 window, and could see amoung all the px sized
> mousetype nothing that looked like a text resizer. Where do they hide
> it? How are people who need it supposed to find it? That begs the
> question, when starting with mousetype, how is anyone who needs a
> resizer going to recognize if there is one there, much less how it
> works? If sites would simply use the user default in the first place,
> then few would have any use for a resizer on the page, since "too big"
> for any web designer is going to be adequate for most such people
> whether they know how to set their own defaults or not.
> -- 
> "I can do all things through Him who gives me strength."
>                                                 Philippians 4:13 NIV
> 
>  Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409
> 
> Felix Miata  ***  http://members.ij.net/mrmazda/auth/
> 
> 
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