This probably won't affect you until you are older, still wanting to maintain an effective and propserous life while waiting to die, but it happens to us in our declining years, and because lifespans are getting longer and longer, it may affect you even more than I.
Currently, when I open a browser, I immediately have to select Ctrl + and press 6 times to have print size at a comfortable level, then if I want to link to another screen, I have to do it again, and again, and again, and again. Is this a design to penalize people who have the audacity to live to an older age?
We are only older on the outside; we are still young on the inside where our mind lives.
Still, if we are fortunate enough to live a long life, isn't it fair that we experience as similar a life as when we were young, while the technology is readily available to make it so?
If this seams reasonable to you, why is it not so?
At least 10 of the 20 or so years I have been computing, I have had to use Ctrl + or Zoom in, to be able to read the written page on the screen of my computer. Not only have I had to do this, I have to press the enter key 6 times for each screen.
Even Kubuntu, the industry leader in confirugability has fallen short in many of their offerings.
Since Kubuntu evidences their affiliation with KDE, I speak to them as one.
Why then, when I set default font configuration to all kubuntu applications as my choice, do they not always work?
Dolphin accepts my default font size configuration, but sudodolphin does not. I am glad no one sees what I have to do to use sudodolphin.
Being 73 years old and infirm, it is difficult for me to get out of a chair any more. I do when necessary, but pay a price in pain each time. So when I must open sudodolphin, I have to stand up on my wrinkley old legs, quivering at the while, put my nose on the monitor, with my head tilted back until it hurts to view still blurry letters through my bifocals just to read the oportunities, options and menu item needs. If you imaged that in your mind, you were probably accurate in the image I experience.
Yakuake, my favorite console, allows for increased default font settings, but leaves the bottom line of their open screen, the line where you can close the application or make changes to the configuration, unreadably small, or in the case of any symbol used to link a choice, a blur, so you have to guess at what it might be.
Or, Kmail, my favorite email application, you can increase font, but you will probably hit Ctrl + a few times before you realize that you have to go to the menu or toolbar to use the Zoom in feature; they like to be different.
What is the matter with SAME, when it comes to rather irrelevant issues?
I hate to think of the misery a Windows user experiences when attempting same.
Monitors are getting affordable for larger sizes, yet still when you open an application only a small part of the interior of the screen appears. To make it nice for me, I press Ctrl + 6 or 7 times until my page fills the monitor. It is wonderful to have the information on screen so large that it might be convenient to reduce in size, even though I never make it smaller.
If I had a monitor the size of the largest wall of the largest room in my studio, I would still fill the screen.
Applications, like Unetbootin, are wonderful programs, but absolutely useless to people with my vision limitations. However, it is a take-it-or-leave-it application, and free, so I cannot complain, excepting for the fact, I would like to be able to use it too. In fact, Kubuntu is free too, so my complaint is rather hollow when I talk to them.
My complaint is not with existing offerings, only to the effect that someone should change what I am talking about.
I can not exagerate my appreciation for the free and high quality operating systems and applications I use, especially Kubuntu. I just can't see why this need of many is not added to their excellence, since it is available on occasion, just not all occasions.
I realize this is becoming boring reading to most, but eventually you will age too, and to the extent some of these problems will be part of your lives, why not use that genious God gave you and create a widget, or applet, or application that will universally solve this problem. If I could, I would.
Thanks for the read Shab
Currently, when I open a browser, I immediately have to select Ctrl + and press 6 times to have print size at a comfortable level, then if I want to link to another screen, I have to do it again, and again, and again, and again. Is this a design to penalize people who have the audacity to live to an older age?
We are only older on the outside; we are still young on the inside where our mind lives.
Still, if we are fortunate enough to live a long life, isn't it fair that we experience as similar a life as when we were young, while the technology is readily available to make it so?
If this seams reasonable to you, why is it not so?
At least 10 of the 20 or so years I have been computing, I have had to use Ctrl + or Zoom in, to be able to read the written page on the screen of my computer. Not only have I had to do this, I have to press the enter key 6 times for each screen.
Even Kubuntu, the industry leader in confirugability has fallen short in many of their offerings.
Since Kubuntu evidences their affiliation with KDE, I speak to them as one.
Why then, when I set default font configuration to all kubuntu applications as my choice, do they not always work?
Dolphin accepts my default font size configuration, but sudodolphin does not. I am glad no one sees what I have to do to use sudodolphin.
Being 73 years old and infirm, it is difficult for me to get out of a chair any more. I do when necessary, but pay a price in pain each time. So when I must open sudodolphin, I have to stand up on my wrinkley old legs, quivering at the while, put my nose on the monitor, with my head tilted back until it hurts to view still blurry letters through my bifocals just to read the oportunities, options and menu item needs. If you imaged that in your mind, you were probably accurate in the image I experience.
Yakuake, my favorite console, allows for increased default font settings, but leaves the bottom line of their open screen, the line where you can close the application or make changes to the configuration, unreadably small, or in the case of any symbol used to link a choice, a blur, so you have to guess at what it might be.
Or, Kmail, my favorite email application, you can increase font, but you will probably hit Ctrl + a few times before you realize that you have to go to the menu or toolbar to use the Zoom in feature; they like to be different.
What is the matter with SAME, when it comes to rather irrelevant issues?
I hate to think of the misery a Windows user experiences when attempting same.
Monitors are getting affordable for larger sizes, yet still when you open an application only a small part of the interior of the screen appears. To make it nice for me, I press Ctrl + 6 or 7 times until my page fills the monitor. It is wonderful to have the information on screen so large that it might be convenient to reduce in size, even though I never make it smaller.
If I had a monitor the size of the largest wall of the largest room in my studio, I would still fill the screen.
Applications, like Unetbootin, are wonderful programs, but absolutely useless to people with my vision limitations. However, it is a take-it-or-leave-it application, and free, so I cannot complain, excepting for the fact, I would like to be able to use it too. In fact, Kubuntu is free too, so my complaint is rather hollow when I talk to them.
My complaint is not with existing offerings, only to the effect that someone should change what I am talking about.
I can not exagerate my appreciation for the free and high quality operating systems and applications I use, especially Kubuntu. I just can't see why this need of many is not added to their excellence, since it is available on occasion, just not all occasions.
I realize this is becoming boring reading to most, but eventually you will age too, and to the extent some of these problems will be part of your lives, why not use that genious God gave you and create a widget, or applet, or application that will universally solve this problem. If I could, I would.
Thanks for the read Shab
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