Not exact matches
The Kindle Fire comes with a solid set of reading tools that offers
very good controls for
changing font type and
size, line spacing, margins and what Kindle calls color mode — three selections that let you
change whether you want dark characters against a light background or light characters against a dark background, and the contrast level.
It'll be
very very nice if they fix the in - book 2 - finger
font size change.
Also, all of these programs have idiosyncrasies; most create ePub files that are
very difficult to customize, since they treat any style
change (italics,
font size, indents, etc.) as a unique case, rather than applying a document - wide style.
That's certainly true, and with a wide range of options for
changing font sizes and typeface, all of which have been crafted to be pixel - perfect, you can make out
very fine text.
Note that the reflowable eBook design is
very similar to the fixed layout eBook design, but it benefits from the reader's ability to
change the
font and
font size, adjust other settings, etc..
The Sony Reader is interesting - it uses no power to hold its image so only
changing pages consumes any juice; it is apparently
very clear and easy to read, and you can adjust the
font size to suit your aging eyes.
Change your
font style and
size Times New Roman
size 9.5 or 10 is a
font /
size combination that is
very clear and easy to read, but also doesn't take up a lot of space.