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notes
- One of the things Type:Rider explained to me (possibly), is why it is that I hate Times New Roman so much, namely that it was (apparently) designed to remain legible when printed cheaply on low-quality paper, which is to say, absolutely not the context even of printing at home these days (let alone screen display).
- I was briefly worried that in fact I just hate all serif fonts, given that I also loathe Computer Modern, but apparently everyone hates Computer Modern so I can just retreat hissing back into the shadows of Garamond, or something.
- One of the things my supervisor keeps saying to me about my writing is that she understands what I mean but I need to unpack a lot! more! and I keep being wildly miscalibrated as to what this actually looks like. I HAVE REALISED (late last night, when I really wanted to have already been asleep, but so it goes) that some of what's going on here is that I'm writing to her-as-audience because I really don't have a good sense of General Geochemistry Knowledge in the field (for a variety of reasons this margin etc) and I have spent a lot of time trying to express ideas etc specifically to her in writing so... no wonder, really! Which will hopefully let me adjust expectations accordingly and maybe start writing in a more appropriately targeted fashion in Science Contexts.
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Great realization about your writing -- that's huge.
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(relatedly, back when i had optic neuritis in 2018 and everything was monstrously blurry i started aggressively setting all of my work documents to arial despite the fact that times new roman is our standard formatting for letters and so forth [which, since everything is submitted to USCIS in print, fair enough perhaps] and now one of the attorneys i work with and i are engaged in a perpetual silent war of swapping the font back and forth on whatever we're working on. *g* i just don't want to have to squint at serifs on a computer screen, dave!)
also thinking about how the default font on kindle paperwhite (which is super hi res) is bookerly, which is a serif font but definitely feels easier to read on that type of screen—but it’s also an E Ink screen, so it’s closer to being like paper (which would maybe support the “better on paper in general” theory??)
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Thanks to $someone-I've-forgotten I've set Atkinson Hyperlegible as my default font and I'm liking it a lot!
I'm a serious type snob (calligraphy, typesetting, and book design in previous lives) and Atkinson isn't pretty but it certainly lives up to its name onscreen. It's a sans serif that explicitly makes every character unique: as shown in the link above, 1 i I l are distinctive even when purposefully blurred.
Not enough to use while in a migraine, but I've become more comfortable with text-to-speech apps on my iPhone.