2005/5/24, Gerald Aichholzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Hello Sebastien, > > Sebastien Arbogast wrote: > >>>you can see the aliased edges in the letters a, b, o and c. This > >>>is causing a very blurry presentation when viewing in normal size. > >> > >>It rather looks like ClearType is on. I wonder who named that technology > >>ClearType anyway > > > > > > I don't think it's because of ClearType, I think it's precisely > > because ClearType is deactivated that Gerald gets this. Because I > > always have ClearType on and I have no problem. I just tried to > > deactivate it and I got almost the same rendering (not as blurry but > > it depends on the quality of your screen and your video driver). > > Gerald try to make sure that ClearType is on : Control > > panel/Display/4th tab/Button Effects...-> Anti-aliasing > > method=ClearType > > And tell me if the problem is still there. > > > > you're right - using ClearType is even better. > > When writing about this problem for the first time the font aliasing > was set to "default" which makes your page (i.e. the font your are > using) very difficult to read. > > Disabling font aliasing results in a much better presentation, Clear- > Type is excellent. But I will still have to decide if I like this > technology because now every application benefits from this which > looks quite unfamiliar (at least for now). > > Thank you for your help :) > > Gerald > I've always used it and I don't even understand why Windows gives you the possibility to turn it off. I couldn't use my computer without ClearType. And performance can't be the issue anymore...
-- Sebastien ARBOGAST
