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Posted by Leonard Blaisdell on 03/26/06 07:00
In article <1143343805.697098.193690@v46g2000cwv.googlegroups.com>,
dorayme@optusnet.com.au wrote:
> The assumption is that a site that is made with no specified or 100%
> main text is the basis for the average user to set the preferred
> browser size. But I really do wonder how true this assumption is.
Good point. But if someone knows enough to set the browser text size in
the first place, they know how to reduce or increase it. Otherwise, what
should an HTML jockey do? Should we design sites based on 80%? What does
100% mean to them?
We do, of course, what they want. But we point out the problem one way
or another. A bunch of them would be perfectly happy if we ran them off
and reduced the text size in their own browsers while they were gone to
match their ideal. I'm serious.
leo
--
<http://web0.greatbasin.net/~leo/>
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