R
Rick C
Guest
I bet the Apple still have a huge leg up on PCs when it comes to displays. Yeah, they both have the same hardware these days, but the way the software manages things is so much better on the Mac. I remember using a Mac many years ago and everything from top to bottom had a consistent look and feel.. On the PC every program is in it's own world with unique fonts, sizes and windows.
I had this machine fairly tuned up and could get most things done without eye strain and yet still got to treat the display as if it could show more than one window at a time. Then I fired up an HDL tool and the fonts are all so small it was impossible to read them without surgeon's magnifiers. So I finally gave in and went for the Windows screen adjustment. Seems I already had it set to 125%. So I thought 150% might do well... adjust, reboot and the screen looked like I had dropped the resolution to 1024 instead of 1920 pixels wide. Everything was so huge! Ok, so I backed that off to 135% and it seems to be a bit better, the new app can be read with only a bit of eye strain. But now I have to go into every app and tweak details to get it to look right again.
On the Mac, if I could read one app, I could read them all! Too bad so much engineering software won't run on the Mac.
So how does Linux handle things like font sizes? I'm thinking it is really the wild west or it forces the user to manually muck with all the settings on every program. At least I can get a lot more engineering tools to run under Linux than on the Mac. I really do need to try Linux sometime.
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Rick C.
- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
I had this machine fairly tuned up and could get most things done without eye strain and yet still got to treat the display as if it could show more than one window at a time. Then I fired up an HDL tool and the fonts are all so small it was impossible to read them without surgeon's magnifiers. So I finally gave in and went for the Windows screen adjustment. Seems I already had it set to 125%. So I thought 150% might do well... adjust, reboot and the screen looked like I had dropped the resolution to 1024 instead of 1920 pixels wide. Everything was so huge! Ok, so I backed that off to 135% and it seems to be a bit better, the new app can be read with only a bit of eye strain. But now I have to go into every app and tweak details to get it to look right again.
On the Mac, if I could read one app, I could read them all! Too bad so much engineering software won't run on the Mac.
So how does Linux handle things like font sizes? I'm thinking it is really the wild west or it forces the user to manually muck with all the settings on every program. At least I can get a lot more engineering tools to run under Linux than on the Mac. I really do need to try Linux sometime.
--
Rick C.
- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging
- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209