I’ve noticed in recent years that more and more apps only offer “small, medium, large” font size settings. My problem is simple. I am visually impaired and need VERY large fonts.
I need my font size set like this:
https://share.icloud.com/photos/08bSDwyyJZm2X4g1f9iZ6mreA
But instead, with more and more apps like Ivory for example, the biggest I can get is this:
https://share.icloud.com/photos/00eUunqHWyZkEWCuFpHlPmVEA
I suspect that the culprit may be Swift UI, but I have no evidence for this.
Does anyone understand the reasoning behind this trend, and is there any possible fix for end users other than begging application developers to have pity? :)
Thanks!
Yeah, even though the older I get the more I appreciate how macOS for the most part “just works” while still being a UN*X system at heart, I’m just so fed up with how each release is more opaque and less documented than the last, with more services that collect your data and send it to Apple even if you opt out. Also, because fixing bugs and incremental development isn’t sexy and marketing needs something cool, each OS release comes with an oodle of half-finished and buggy whizz-bang features that ultimately never really get polished, and end up sort of quietly abandoned and left to gather dust once Apple’s dev teams move on to working on the big OS release’s whizz-bangs, which often sort of overlap with previous whizz-bangs without actually leveraging them. So for example, instead of incremental improvements to Spaces and Mission Control – the two window management systems we already had – we got Stage Manager which initially didn’t even work with Spaces, and which nobody seems to have found a good use for yet, all the while multimonitor support somehow manages to get worse with every release, color calibration support was completely fucked much to the chagrin of visual arts folks, that audio balance drift bug is 10 years old, visual accessibility’s gotten worse, and so on and so on.
Hah, yeah, as much as I gripe about problems with macOS and Apple’s data collection habits or the occasional jank in Linux, using Windows feels so painful and intrusive that it should probably be covered under the Geneva Conventions, although part of that definitely just comes from the fact that I haven’t owned a Windows system since Win8 was a thing so my Windows encounters are pretty sporadic. It’s honestly surprising that the accessibility story is actually better in Windows, I really wasn’t expecting that.
I’m in the same boat as far as phones go. Android’s UX somehow manages to irritate the everliving fuck out of me, so even a “degoogled” Android version is a non-starter for me, but there aren’t too many choices out there anymore (yay consolidation.) Sailfish OS is one that springs to mind, but as a project it feels more undead than really alive, and it’s closed source too.
but as a project it feels more undead than really alive
:)
Then it’s a no go for me. I mean, since it’s closed source I’d rather keep using my iPhone which works great and let me access every single one of the few ads I do need.