Where it helps the most is when you jack up the font size and only have
a few words per line (a lot of sight - challenged people like using e-readers specifically because you can adjust the font size).
A reading method called Span Limited Tactile Reinforcement (SLTR) was proposed, wherein text is displayed on a small screen handheld device (such as a smartphone), using large fonts so that the text spans only
a few words per line.
The Scribd app is imo pretty unreadable on a 5 ″ Android phone because of the huge side margins; when enlarging the tiny fonts, you have
a few words per line.
I have my controls set at the default font size, but with
the fewest words per line, giving a nice margin to the page of text.
Not exact matches
Rather, Sinclair Colman writes a single
line of a
few words per page describing each activity.
It would have been nice if you had adjusted the Kobo
line spacing so that it actually looks like it can display more than a
few words per page.
The smaller screen sizes associated with tablets, phablets, and smartphones has meant that text is broken up into smaller sections
per line, sometimes as
few as two or three
words.
Even if your first
few words are the most interesting thing your recruiter has ever read, going over two
lines per bullet is pushing it a bit.