"I would spend 95% of my time on special solutions or hacks, which are
pleasing only 5% of the users."
Although I wouldn't say it works out to be such a big percentage, but
you are right you would spend some time on it. But you need to start
spending that time on it, new laws being passed will sooner or later
force you to start designing with accessibility in mind (recent cases
against priceline etc).
And to be fair, its not about 'pleasing' the users, it is about making
the website usable to the audience. You may be focusing on font-size in
your argument, but it sounds like an argument against accessibility in
general.

I would agree about hardware designers etc, but that just adds to
Patrick's argument, people will be accessing your site with more than
one resolution, you cannot predict how they will do that. By making your
site have resizeable text you can accommodate them. It is harder to do,
but the net gain is worth it.

I wonder if this will turn into a bigger argument about fluid versus
fixed designing...


Tim Hill
Computer Associates
Graphic Artist
tel: +612 9937 0792
fax: +612 9937 0546
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Lothar B. Baier
Sent: Friday, 19 November 2004 8:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [WSG] Font size and arrogance

Hi!

Patrick and Andreas, you both are right on one hand. But on the other
one it's not so simple. My goal is surely to produce websites, which can
be use by everybody and please their eyes.

But is it my fault, that dell or hp ore other produce laptops, which
screensize and screen resolution are set to a default which makes it
impossible to read a text easy? Is it my fault, that the designers of
browsers after about 10 years of webstandards are not able to produce
browsers which behave according to those standards? I don't think so. 
And it's also not my fault, if somebody  uses a computer with little
knowledge of what he is doing.

To go back to the example from my last post: if someone drives a car
without driverlicense and runs into a tree, is that the fault of the
car's designer? Have you ever seen a user who reads the handbook before
he switches on the comp? I am in the computer business for more then 25
years now. I'm still waiting for that user.

What I wanted to say is that if I try to please every single user in the
wolrd, I would spend 95% of my time on special solutions or hacks, which
are pleasing only 5% of the users. Nobody will pay me for that 95% time.

Ideals are nice in theory, but usely not realy good, when they are put
into practice.

So I think instead of spending a mayority of our time in finding
solutions for problems, which are not caused by us, we should collect
our energy to put presure on browser designers to produce browser which
are standard and to hardware designers to not set the default resolution
of a screen to what is technicaly possible but to just something, which
is compatible with human eyesight.

Lothar
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