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Thanks a mil,
-William
what i've found to be the best is to go to system > preferences > appearance > fonts > details. click the radio buttons next to "Subpixel (LCD)" at the top, and "Slight" at the bottom.
i think the fonts look great with that setting...
k
I read about it on Launchpad and there is a big discussion about using it as the new default Ubuntu font.
As the name suggests it comes from the Google Android SDK and is opensource so no copyright issues.
It looks amazing as a document font for webpages in firefox (size15) and is also pinpoint sharp as a small system font, even at 7.5pt. I was a happy Liberation Sans user but I am sticking with this for LIFE.
The Android filesystem that this came from is a 50mb download so I rezipped the font on its own here about 1.7mb:
http://rapidshare.com/files/154385314/droid.fon...
Also, if any programmers want a great Monospace font check out Inconsolata:
http://www.levien.com/type/myfonts/inconsolata....
Sorry, but the Droid font is bad. It's made for funnily tiny resolutions like the phone, but for real screens, it's bad. The weight is distributed all wrong so it becomes distracting. A very good, in depth analysis was done here: http://troy-sobotka.blogspot.com/2008/07/why-dr...
Since I spend most of my day in a terminal (with screen and vim), I removed the conf file again...
Sorry, but your tip regarding font rendering in Ubuntu is only half the truth! Did you ever had a look at font rendering after running a sudo command, 'gksu natilus', for example. The fonts are ugly as before! Therefore, I guess that the .fonts.conf file should also be placed into the /root directory, or I'm wrong?
Best regards
Dieter
Thanks for the tweak. It's one of the most useful I've used.
You're right, ~/.fonts.conf is a per-user setting. Putting a copy of the file (or a link to it) in root's home is necessary for apps running as root.
lapubell:
Yes, the file should be used by any desktop environment.
What amazes me is that people complain about the text rendering in Ubuntu; "How do I make the fonts as sharp as Vista?".
And it's not just a case of me preferring the full hinting because it's different to what the other operating systems provided. I always used to turn off the anti-aliased text in Mac OS 8 because it simply looks crap.
And, as a technician that has to work on Apple computer all day, Titanium running Leopard to be specific, OSX has the worst font smoothing. I tried different settings from light to auto in System Preferences, the text still look jaggy. It also has to do with the way Apple choose the contrast/brightness of the screen.
Thanks a lot.
Eat it apple fan bois
For example, some capital letters in some fonts are higher than they should be. I turned the option off again.
I'm happy with the subpixel smoothing option that's available in the configuration dialog.
Many Thanks!
I've tried DejaVu Sans, Liberation Sans and Droid Sans, but it doesn't seem to be one of those...