Use normal sizes (10 - 12) and
normal fonts like Times New Roman, Garamond, Bookman Old Style, or Book Antiqua.
Not exact matches
For one thing, the actual screen is truly of paperback size, and when using a one - size larger
font, the amount of text is still dense enough to feel
like normal reading it.
In regards to your formulas, these should work just
like any
normal text would, just make sure you properly embed your
fonts for any uncommon symbols that you might use.
You can do all of the
normal stuff
like adjusting the
font size,
font type and background colors, margin, alignment as well as brightness to best suit your preference.
Sony's PDF machine is a great try, hobbled by low res and high price, with barely good enough rendering even for PDF... I got so excited initially, until i did the math and seen the demos: simple PDF's, no zoomable
fonts like a
normal kindle page (sent from a WWW with Alt - k), no backlight, no apps and no Miracast... for 1K $
After playing around with them a bit, I
like the sans serif
font (which is bolder than the
normal) with the medium line spacing option, on the 4th text size.
Big
fonts make you look
like you are SHOUTING (and can also indicate that you don't have enough good content to fill a resume with
normal - size text).