I haven't been doing very many video reviews over the past six months, so I thought I'd break the ice with a quick and easy video showing the new
font choices now available on the Kindle Android app.
With all of
these font choices now available I am wondering if I missed one that is a liitle darker or bolder than the others.
Not exact matches
The
choices made
now will determine whether the genome project is a
font for future discovery or a binary junkyard of data.
Now that ebooks have arrived to supplement paper books, it's not enough to have just one
font choice when sitting down to read.
Now that people have gotten a chance to try out the new
font, an obvious question arises: Do you like the new Amazon Ember Bold
font choice?
It
now offers all - text bold, though it lacks the full range of
font choices and customization that Moon + Reader Pro does.
But
now the Kobo Touch has more layout settings than the Nook, with six margin settings, nine line spacing settings, and a lot more
font choices and sizes.
Amazon has also updated the Kindle's software, which
now includes more
font choices and a tweaked UI that makes it easier to discover new books.
I
now see that publications like Rolling Stone offer the reader more
choices in
font size and readability than the, by comparison, locked - down design of the Conde Nast publications, including The New Yorker.
You
now have a
choice between serif and non serif
font typeface.
Artist Nicolas Guagnini (and Bill Hayden) were responsible for the phallic
font, and
now, you'll see it again, this time writ large, with phrases of Guagnini's
choice, on Bortolami's walls.
Attorneys should know by
now that Helvetica (or Microsoft's bastard spinoff, Arial) is a terrible, terrible
font choice for use in legal documents.