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browsercrap ie9?

category: offtopic [glöplog]
i just tested internet explorer 9 and wondered about the horrible fontrendering. is that the new browsing experience from microsoft or is there a wrong adjusted option i cant find?


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added on the 2011-09-29 11:31:10 by marsulpi marsulpi
hmmm, I think the version on the right looks better than the non-antialiased fonts on the right :)

btw my rendering on Chrome 15.x.x is more like the IE9 showed on the pic.
added on the 2011-09-29 11:37:02 by rez rez
1992 called, they want their pixels back.
added on the 2011-09-29 11:37:31 by kb_ kb_
wut? someone's using ie?
added on the 2011-09-29 12:00:07 by pista pista
Same story, different browsers:

Quote:
...Apple engineers probably feel like they're doing a huge service to the Windows community, bringing their "superior" font rendering technology to the heathens, and it explains why Windows users are generally going to think that Safari's font rendering is blurry and strange and they don't know why, they just don't like it. Actually they're thinking... "Whoa! That's different. I don't like different. Why don't I like these fonts? Oh, when I look closer, they look blurry. That must be why."
added on the 2011-09-29 12:08:48 by gasman gasman
never liked these blurry fonts, always goes for the clear black pixel next to white pixel type.
added on the 2011-09-29 12:23:25 by Navis Navis
Maybe we need a campaign against antialiasing? Bring back the blocky pixels, something like that?

(But seriously, what kb said.)
added on the 2011-09-29 13:50:00 by psonice psonice
Some people look at me weirdly when I tell them I even use AA fonts when programming (8pt Bitstream Vera Sans Mono with Cleartype) but I just happen to like it.

Oh, and most important thing with ClearType that most people (even graphic artists) regularly forget: SET UP YOUR MONITOR CORRECTLY. With Contrast turned up to the moon, Saturation that burns your eyes out and sharpening that makes them bleed afterward, it's no miracle that ClearType looks like total crap.

http://www.lagom.nl/lcd-test/ <- there. At least get Contrast, Sharpness, Gamma and the b/w levels right. And then try Cleartype again. :)

added on the 2011-09-29 13:58:18 by kb_ kb_
chrome 16.x screwed up font rendering... basically the wrong one is chrome :-)
added on the 2011-09-29 14:14:21 by Jcl Jcl
Cleartype antialiasing is the best. i find it smoother and easier to read with antialiasing on. and if your resolution dont match the default screen-size, it will look like crap.
added on the 2011-09-29 14:21:00 by rudi rudi
On a slightly unrelated note, marsulpi, using a jpeg to compare font renderings is probably not the best way.
added on the 2011-09-29 14:44:09 by Tarmil Tarmil
What Tarmil said. And yes, ClearType is pretty nice especially on high-DPI displays.
bartman: i never used cleartype so it was before taking the screenshot.
tarmil: i know, but it didnt affect the effect. ^^
added on the 2011-09-29 19:14:46 by marsulpi marsulpi
ie9 doesnt use the regular gdi-cleartype version, or something..
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added on the 2011-09-29 22:38:38 by the_Ye-Ti the_Ye-Ti
KB: I think i still don't need anti aliased fonts. My CRT anti aliases everything for me, thanks.
added on the 2011-09-30 00:12:12 by Exin Exin
ClearType always looks like HAM fringing to me. But I tried kb's monitor calibration link and...

...ClearType still looks like HAM fringing. Oh well. Can't please 'em all.
I noticed mobile phones use aggressive subpixel sharpening everywhere, and I love cleartype myself
Uncleartype is the first thing I disable as it for me aswell looks like HAM fringing.

added on the 2011-09-30 07:20:12 by _Chucky_ _Chucky_
yeah cleartype is the shit for Times/Arial/*.ttf fonts, but of course I like sharpened non-antialias fonts when I'm browsing on asciiarena for example :)
added on the 2011-09-30 09:17:45 by rez rez
(At least) one of the developers of Direct2D/DirectWrite is a scener, Nightlord/Glance and IE9 is completely based on that technology. So, think again when talking about IE's font rendering. Some of the knowledge comes from c64 roots, not newbie coders. Respect!!! ;)
added on the 2011-09-30 09:19:42 by Skate Skate
Seems to be a highly subjective topic. Personally, I don't like ClearType's excessive color fringing all that much. By far the best subpixel antialiasing I've seen until now is FreeType's "lcdlegacy" renderer. Unfortunately, this isn't default any longer and has been replaced by something that combines the worst aspects of Apple's and Microsoft's implementations: blurry text *and* color fringing.
added on the 2011-09-30 10:40:09 by KeyJ KeyJ
back when IE9 was platform preview, I remember distinctly noticing that the text rendering was very blurry. I still have cleartype on and calibrated properly, but nothing looked that fuzzy. I have direct2d enabled in firefox, and it does not look anywhere near as bad as it does in IE9. Or safari.
Sooner or later we will have 200 to 300 ppi screens and we will be able to forget about cleartypes and similar... iPhone5 retina display looks amazing for example
added on the 2011-10-01 10:49:12 by texel texel

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