Good Morning Sunshine,
I hope all is well in your life. And if it isn't, I hope you are being cared for in your troubles.
I've been busy seeing my incredible clients (honestly. The bravest people come to therapy), enjoying the weather changing from rainy to... slightly less rainy, and writing new stuff as well as refreshing some old stuff.
Here's a sampler from the newest post on the blog:
Comic Sans and Camel Case
Comic Sans font is so hated there has even been a campaign since 1999 to ban it. Holly Combs, the originator of the campaign has been quoted as saying “Using Comic Sans is like turning up to a black-tie event in a clown costume.” Which is pretty funny.
However, Comic Sans is considered one of the best fonts for dyslexic people. The creator of Comic Sans designed it to be playful, friendly and informal, like a comic book: ‘It had personality, unusual letter spacing and unequal visual weight’. The unusual shape of the letters makes them easier to read, the lettering being much clearer.
Camel Case is using CapitalLettersWhenYouDon’tHaveSpaces. Most of us don’t do it when we #Sentences.
Using Camel Case simply means that folks using aural aides can actually understand whatever it is you’ve hashtagged. Capital Letters are interpreted by those operating systems as separate words, whereas a bunch of words stuck together are simply gobbledegook.
|