This link has been bookmarked by 37 people . It was first bookmarked on 03 Aug 2006, by Domas Monkus.
-
02 Apr 08
-
27 Mar 08
-
05 Feb 08
-
04 Feb 08
-
25 Jan 08
-
12 Nov 07
-
11 Sep 07
-
21 Aug 07
-
09 Aug 07
-
22 Apr 07
-
11 Apr 07
-
31 Mar 07
Doug Holtonage of the reader and size of the font make a difference
-
02 Feb 07
-
10 Jan 07
bearclauOptimal Web Design offers empirically-based suggestions on how to design and build usable websites.
-
26 Apr 05
-
12 Oct 04
-
24 Jul 04
-
23 Jul 04
-
20 Jul 04
-
-
"Significant differences in reading time were found in that Times New Roman and Arial were read faster than Courier New, Century Schoolbook, and Georgia." "Evidence suggests that the most commonly used fonts tend to be equally legible at the 10-, 12-, and 14-point size. Comparing four sans serif fonts (Arial, Comic Sans MS, Tahoma, and Verdana) and four serif fonts (Courier New, Georgia, Century Schoolbook, Times New Roman) at a resolution of 1024 x 768 revealed no difference in effective reading (font accuracy/speed of reading) between font types (Bernard, Lida, Riley, Hackler, & Janzen, 2002)."
-
"Significant differences in reading time were found in that Times New Roman and Arial were read faster than Courier New, Century Schoolbook, and Georgia." "Evidence suggests that the most commonly used fonts tend to be equally legible at the 10-, 12-, and 14-point size. Comparing four sans serif fonts (Arial, Comic Sans MS, Tahoma, and Verdana) and four serif fonts (Courier New, Georgia, Century Schoolbook, Times New Roman) at a resolution of 1024 x 768 revealed no difference in effective reading (font accuracy/speed of reading) between font types (Bernard, Lida, Riley, Hackler, & Janzen, 2002)."
-
"Significant differences in reading time were found in that Times New Roman and Arial were read faster than Courier New, Century Schoolbook, and Georgia." "Evidence suggests that the most commonly used fonts tend to be equally legible at the 10-, 12-, and 14-point size. Comparing four sans serif fonts (Arial, Comic Sans MS, Tahoma, and Verdana) and four serif fonts (Courier New, Georgia, Century Schoolbook, Times New Roman) at a resolution of 1024 x 768 revealed no difference in effective reading (font accuracy/speed of reading) between font types (Bernard, Lida, Riley, Hackler, & Janzen, 2002)."
-
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.