On 2020-09-10, at 9:25 AM, Philip Oakley <philipoakley@iee.email> wrote:

> As someone with an eye injury, I really hate the matching trend for
> **washed out grey fonts** that lack contrast on a classic white screen
> (I have f.lux for a bit of night time dimming of the blue component).

As someone with mild dyslexia, that finds 24 point MS Comic Sans to be the best 
font for reading:
I also hate this "grey on black" or "grey on grey" view from people who assume 
that monitors must be at full brightness and then want to turn down their 
text/backgrounds to compensate.
I hate the view of "Night hue means toss an amber/sepia/whatever filter over 
everything", turning white into amber, and black into grey-amber, making 
everything harder to read.
I hate this "We only have 4 CSS values set, and you must choose one of them, 
they are sufficient to satisfy everyone because we say so and the ADA doesn't 
apply to us because it was written before computers became common".
I hate this "We can decide that only these, "professional" (meaning someone 
paid money to develop them) fonts count and your choice of font is a 'joke' 
font that we don't include because no one needs it" attitude. 
And I bleeping hate the whole "Turn your phone sideways? OK, we'll display more 
information, you can't make your text bigger. Want to make your text bigger? 
Now you have to scroll left/right because obviously wider coverage is more 
important than bigger text". I hate the whole bleeping "We don't care what font 
size you told the phone to use, we'll use some CSS font pixel count specified 
by some other person".

OK, end rant.

Computers should be the best example of an accessible device. They can 
trivially display bigger text. But all these "designers" that want to assume 
that they know every pixel and every location of everything because they are 
entitled to control everything about how your room display is set up ... this 
should be illegal, and the ADA should expand to computers.

You don't know my lighting. F.Lux is the biggest fail here. I don't care about 
sunset, I have sunlight lamps.
You don't know my monitor. "White" is comfortable, and I need to use a custom 
calibration. Hint: it's not a 2.4 gamma. It has a black level significantly 
higher than zero, and "max" is room light.
You don't know my eyes. Significant eyeglass correction, and not 20/20 after 
correction.
You don't know my age. I *used* to be a 22 year old programmer who used small 
fonts. But no, I never was happy with those tiny tiny x-term windows, even then 
I used bigger fonts. (Used to use 10-12 pixel in X on school monitors. Now? 24 
"point" on a 32 in 720p monitor, capital letters measure at 3/8th to 1/2 inch, 
depending on program and if it's using pixels or point and scaling.)

( And I can't stand people that assume "This graph module was designed for dark 
colors on a white background? OK, we'll add a dark mode by making the 
background black, but leave the checkbox in the "white" position, so you have 
to click it twice to turn off the black background". Graph colors stayed dark. )

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