Twayne -
Thanks for your response. Okay, I understand the HTML objection.
Could you please respond to my other questions?
Thanks in advance.
Craig
Twayne wrote:
>>"Craig Schiller" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>>news:%23GbY%(E-Mail Removed)
>>
>>
>>>Twayne -
>>>
>>>Thanks for your response. See below.
>>>
>>>Twayne wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>"Craig Schiller" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>>>>news:%(E-Mail Removed)
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Hi all -
>>>>>
>>>>>Just added a new monitor with much higher resolution. I've been
>>>>>able
>>>>>to make the desktop icons and captions larger (via
>>>>>Desktop/properties/appearance/advanced), but not the icons and
>>>>>fonts
>>>>>in the quick launch and taskbar. Also, the font size of web pages
>>>>>in IE7, and things like the message window in Netscape Communicator
>>>>>are still really small, despite the fact that I've also changed the
>>>>>DPI setting to 120.
>>>>>
>>>>>How can I make the icons and fonts larger in these areas?
>>>>>
>>>>>Thanks in advance.
>>>>>
>>>>>Craig
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>Quicklaunch has its own selector: Right click an open area in QL,
>>>>choose Properties, Start Menu and Customize. There, remove the tick
>>>>from "Use small icons ... " .
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>Actually, it's a radio button selector between large icons and small
>>>icons. Large was already selected. Deselecting and reselecting showed
>>>that this only affected the start menu items, not the Quick Launch
>>>area.
>>>
>>>
>>>>In IE 7 you can set the text size; see html & plain text settings.
>>>> Or set the magnification higher when you need it.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>Oddly, there is no difference in text size whether medium, large, or
>>>largest is selected. Only increasing the zoom is effective.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>Or try choosing the next lower resolution if the monitor will accept
>>>>it. Lower resolutions run a tad faster, too.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>I should have mentioned this is an LCD monitor. I was under the
>>>impression these were only supposed to be run at their native
>>>resolution. Am I wrong?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>I don't know about the others. IMO the best solution is to bring
>>>>down the resolution. If it's a wide-screen, be sure to choose a
>>>>wide-screen resolution or the screen will look stretched or not fill
>>>>the whole screen.
>>>>
>>>>Be sure all your video card settings are right for the monitor and
>>>>you might have to fine tune it or the monitor controls themselves to
>>>>get a perfect screen alignment left/right top/bottom.
>>>>
>>>>Please don't post in HTML; use Plain Text instead.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>I will attempt to post this in plain text, but could you please
>>>explain the objection?
>>>
>>>
>>Well, they're different for different people. In my case when I
>>Reply, I get interrupted by a message saying I'm about to send and
>>HTML mail and newsgroups don't like that, and do I really want to? I
>>also have visual problems and HTML over-rides my client settings,
>>often making the text too small for me to read easily.
>>Other newsreaders, especially the older types, cannot render HTML.
>>Instead of seeing the intended text, the reader sees a mess of HTML
>>tags and formats making it very hard to read:
>>
>>
>
><DIV><SPAN class=q1><FONT size=2></FONT></SPAN> </DIV>
><DIV><SPAN class=q1><FONT size=2>Other newsreaders, especially the older
>types,
>cannot render HTML. Instead of seeing the intended text, the reader sees
>a mess
>of HTML tags and formats making it very hard to read. </FONT>It'll
>look
>something like this; <STRONG>try</STRONG> to picture reading very much
>of
><U>THAT</U>? </DIV>
>
>People with readers that don't render HTML often won't even look at an
>HTML message. Fortunately, there aren't a lot of those kind of readers
>still around, but there are some.
> Another reason is the size of the files for HTML vs Plain Text. With
>Plain TExt it's all 7-bit ASCII but with HTML it's 8-bit ASCII plus a
>whole slew of controls and formatting marks.
> You can find a lot more information by searching at wikipedia.com for
>netiquette and related subjects if you're interested. The RFCs and
>FYIs, the "rules of the road" for the internet also all still suggest
>using Plain Text only for newsgroups.
> Not all newsgroups require it, but most will ask you to refrain from
>posting in HTML.
>
>
>Cheers,
>
>Twayne
>
>
>
>
>
>>>Thanks again.
>>>
>>>Craig
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>HTH,
>>>>
>>>>Twayne`
>>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
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