My two ThinkPads have high resolution 14" and 15" LCDs. They cost a bundle, but they were good, useful machines.
It used to be the case that one often had to run with different DPI / text scaling options in order to make the Winders text large enough to read comfortably on high resolution screens. Otherwise the text and icons were microscopic. Of course, sometimes that would cause weird problems. E.g. My dad had ocular melanoma and lost his right eye last year, so he's been running his XP desktop at 125% text scaling. Since doing so, the Time setting from the GUI has been broken - he can't change the AM/PM dropdown box to PM (it doesn't take). I had to use "time" in the command line to do it. Back in Win3.1, there was some weirdness in Word or something where some menu option wouldn't show up if the text scaling in Winders had been changed.
Of course in 7, there are only 3 scaling choices (100%, 125%, and 150%). It's stupid. No doubt there's a registry setting or some underlying API one can use to change it (I wouldn't be surprised if Adobe does something like that to make their apps even more fragile..), but if they're going to limit it, they should have better choices.
There are too many things like that in Winders that are terribly annoying. It's as if they had some summer intern write the code for that stuff about 20 years ago and nobody at MS checked it and thought about the implications...
In my copy of Office (2010?) I never could find a color theme that looked reasonable to me. I don't recall what I ended up with, but it might have been "black". I generally turn off the "ribbon" as much as I can and use keyboard shortcuts as much as possible... Ctrl = is Subscript, Ctrl + is Superscript. But apparently there's no shortcut for going back to normal baseline text?? :-/
On the Mac, I haven't felt the need to adjust things as much but it seems to "just work" much better on large, HR, screens. But the Mac is still mainly a "play around with" desktop for me.
YMMV of course. ;-)
Enjoy!
Cheers,
Scott.
(Who is hoping that cheap, decent IPS or similar 4K desktop screens arrive in the not-too-distant future before replacing his 24" IPS screens.)
It used to be the case that one often had to run with different DPI / text scaling options in order to make the Winders text large enough to read comfortably on high resolution screens. Otherwise the text and icons were microscopic. Of course, sometimes that would cause weird problems. E.g. My dad had ocular melanoma and lost his right eye last year, so he's been running his XP desktop at 125% text scaling. Since doing so, the Time setting from the GUI has been broken - he can't change the AM/PM dropdown box to PM (it doesn't take). I had to use "time" in the command line to do it. Back in Win3.1, there was some weirdness in Word or something where some menu option wouldn't show up if the text scaling in Winders had been changed.
Of course in 7, there are only 3 scaling choices (100%, 125%, and 150%). It's stupid. No doubt there's a registry setting or some underlying API one can use to change it (I wouldn't be surprised if Adobe does something like that to make their apps even more fragile..), but if they're going to limit it, they should have better choices.
There are too many things like that in Winders that are terribly annoying. It's as if they had some summer intern write the code for that stuff about 20 years ago and nobody at MS checked it and thought about the implications...
In my copy of Office (2010?) I never could find a color theme that looked reasonable to me. I don't recall what I ended up with, but it might have been "black". I generally turn off the "ribbon" as much as I can and use keyboard shortcuts as much as possible... Ctrl = is Subscript, Ctrl + is Superscript. But apparently there's no shortcut for going back to normal baseline text?? :-/
On the Mac, I haven't felt the need to adjust things as much but it seems to "just work" much better on large, HR, screens. But the Mac is still mainly a "play around with" desktop for me.
YMMV of course. ;-)
Enjoy!
Cheers,
Scott.
(Who is hoping that cheap, decent IPS or similar 4K desktop screens arrive in the not-too-distant future before replacing his 24" IPS screens.)