- From: Andrew Cunningham <lang.support@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 26 Aug 2013 14:47:55 +1000
- To: Felix Miata <mrmazda@earthlink.net>
- Cc: www-style@w3.org
Received on Monday, 26 August 2013 04:48:21 UTC
On 26/08/2013 2:07 PM, "Felix Miata" <mrmazda@earthlink.net> wrote: > > > There is no requirement that users suffer the impediment of a user agent lacking such essential configurability. In essence true, but then users that have this problem are likely to have it with all major browsers. If all available user agents aren't configurabl for them, then there is an implicit requirement that they do have to suffer such impediments. At the moment are trying to find better ways of controlling fonts in IE, Firefox and Chrome on Windows. The issue is that users that have this problem, have no alternative browsers to choose. If we look back at the history of web browser development, user agents have become more entrenched in their paradigms, less flexible, and less supportive of minority and lesser used languages. A.
Received on Monday, 26 August 2013 04:48:21 UTC