From: fusc sub on
I'm not a Mathematica user (so far), but wanted to have a look at it,
so I tried to look at the Demonstration Project examples.

I downloaded a random sample (EulerProductForTheZetaFunction.nbp) and
installed Mathematica Player 7.
Trouble is, the font in the display is far too small to read all the
notation, especially in the part of the text that follows the
interactive graph.
It seems that the font is hardwired in the code, because resetting my
screen DPI to enlarge the fonts changed every application's appearance
EXCEPT for the NBP example.

Something is missing. I need to adjust the scaling of the whole
display (like the Zoom In command in Firefox), but there is no such
option in Mathematica Player's very simple menu. Without this, the
examples are unreadable and therefore useless. Is there some work-
around?

subfusc

From: David Bailey on
fusc sub wrote:
> I'm not a Mathematica user (so far), but wanted to have a look at it,
> so I tried to look at the Demonstration Project examples.
>
> I downloaded a random sample (EulerProductForTheZetaFunction.nbp) and
> installed Mathematica Player 7.
> Trouble is, the font in the display is far too small to read all the
> notation, especially in the part of the text that follows the
> interactive graph.
> It seems that the font is hardwired in the code, because resetting my
> screen DPI to enlarge the fonts changed every application's appearance
> EXCEPT for the NBP example.
>
> Something is missing. I need to adjust the scaling of the whole
> display (like the Zoom In command in Firefox), but there is no such
> option in Mathematica Player's very simple menu. Without this, the
> examples are unreadable and therefore useless. Is there some work-
> around?
>
> subfusc
>
Note that there is a gadget in the bottom right of a notebook to magnify
the contents. If this doesn't help, I would contact Wolfram support:

support(a)wolfram.com

David Bailey
http://www.dbaileyconsultancy.co.uk