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From: JP on 8 Aug 2010 21:37 For the longest time the "Hotmail" default font was Verdana 10. Now, for some reason, it defaults to Tahoma 10 which is smaller. How do I return the default font to Verdana 10?
From: John Doe on 8 Aug 2010 21:47 "JP" <leddyjp delhitel.net> wrote: > For the longest time the "Hotmail" default font was Verdana 10. > Now, for some reason, it defaults to Tahoma 10 which is > smaller. > > How do I return the default font to Verdana 10? Check your power supply.
From: VanguardLH on 8 Aug 2010 22:57 JP wrote: > For the longest time the "Hotmail" default font was Verdana 10. Now, for > some reason, it defaults to Tahoma 10 which is smaller. > > How do I return the default font to Verdana 10? Start a campaign. Design a web site or use on the social networking (i.e., ego stroking) web sites, like Facebook. Get a LOT of "friends" that agree with you. Have those compatriots sign a complaint and submit it to Microsoft if you ever manage who there to give the complaint. Ask Microsoft to change their choice regarding how they designed their webmail client for you to use their free e-mail service. Or you could what other Hotmail users do, and that is to use the drop-down list for the down-arrow next to the "?" help icon and select feedback. Of course, maybe there were lots of users that previously complained that Verdana was much too wide a font and inserted far too much whitespace and they wanted a more compressed font. So you pushing your vote button might not have any effect if there were others that pushed the other vote button many more times than you. Verdana has wider characters and also a lot of whitespace between them. I suspect it is the extra whitespace that you miss. Tahoma is closer to Arial although I'm not aware that Tahoma is a default fault included in the installation of all operating systems. If the font isn't available on the host, a substitute font gets used and that'll be Arial or Helvetica depending on your OS. The sizing of Tahoma is closer to Arial much more so than Verdana. With the need to use a substituted font, layout of a Verdana formatted message would change a lot more drastically than one written in Tahoma. Of course, Microsoft should've selected Arial (for a proportional font) or Courier New (for a monospaced font so columnar data will align). See: http://my.opera.com/area42/blog/css-font-matching-windows-mac-and-linux Of course, you're talking about Hotmail, a webmail client that composes only in HTML format despite that the vast majority of e-mails need nothing more than plain text (so with Hotmail there is a MIME part for HTML and text versions to double the size of the message). At one time, Microsoft didn't even understand that HTML formatted e-mails were supposed to include a plain text MIME part to ensure a recipient that couldn't render HTML content could still read the message. Eventually they added both MIME parts and, of course, doubled the size of the e-mail. There is an option available using Hotmail's webmail client to select plain text as the sending format but HTML is the default. There is no user-configurable option to specify which format to use by default (as is available in the webmail clients for many other e-mail providers). You get HTML format as the default because that is what Microsoft chose for their design. You now get Tahoma as the default font with no user-configurable option to change it and because, again, that's also Microsoft choice in their design. You can complain by sending feedback but you might be fighting a tide of other users that complained about Verdana as the default font. Verdana wastes a LOT of space in a document. It is equivalent to kids using double-spaced typing in their essays to bloat the number of pages to make their report look bigger. Since you are asking about using their webmail client, you could change the zoom setting in your web browser to make text look bigger for failing or aging eyes. If you always want a different zoom than IE7/8's default of 125% then go into Internet Options -> Advanced and uncheck the options "Reset text size ..." and "Reset zoom level ...". Another choice would be to up the DPI (dots per inch) setting in Windows that decides how big will be the text on the screen. When you get a bigger monitor, you are wasting the increased resolution that you paid for if you let the objects get smaller. With the DPI the same (default is 96%) but as screen resolution goes up with a larger monitor, objects will get smaller so their use the same number of dots (plus they get less focused and often have color tinge artifacts). If you paid for increased resolution in a larger monitor then use it. Up the DPI setting in Windows, like to 125%, so the objects remain the same size as before but now use more dots so they are sharper. Not only will the e-mails in your web browser look easier to read but so will everything else in other apps.
From: Peter on 9 Aug 2010 13:31
In article <i3nm4l$3l8$1(a)theodyn.ncf.ca>, leddyjp(a)delhitel.net says... > For the longest time the "Hotmail" default font was Verdana 10. Now, for > some reason, it defaults to Tahoma 10 which is smaller. > > How do I return the default font to Verdana 10? > > > You haven't stated your browser. However, you can force all web pages to use a specific font, but would you really want to do that? In IE, for instance: If you want to have the fonts and colors you specify in Internet Explorer to be used for all websites, regardless of the fonts that have been set by the website designer, follow these steps. In Internet Explorer, click the Tools button, and then click Internet Options. On the General tab, click Accessibility. Select the Ignore colors specified on webpages, Ignore font styles specified on webpages, and Ignore font sizes specified on webpages check boxes, and then click OK twice. -- Pete Ives Remove All_stRESS before sending me an email |