![]() I love Evernote, I use it for work, for my personal organizing, and I have always recommended it to people I work with.īut in terms of the mobile version I want to remind the developers that not everyone uses Evernote seated at a well lit desk, and not everyone has perfect vision. Evernote is a productivity tool, and squinting at small type on small screens isn't productive at all. I would use Evernote a lot more if I could adjust the font size. I just started using evernote and I like it, I've tried OneNote, MS Word, and pen and paper for keeping miscellanious notes recorded, but I'm going to continue looking for greener pastures. I don't see how that detracts from the user experience. are part of a broader UI experience that you interface with more regularly, it makes sense to be able to control that. ![]() Yeah this is different - the font family/size for file system navigation is one thing, and for the menus in evernote that's fine, but since the tag hierarchies, list view, etc. Not to be too hard on the font, which I actually used to use a lot, but I can't imagine how it is more useful than some of the other "standard" ones like Courier New. If they don't, I'll start posting in light grey Comic Sans, which is apparently one of those core fonts we ought to all be using I hope the developers see my comments in the spirit in which they were intended. I see that you are really teasing and pushing the EN team to improve their productĪnd you're doing it intelligently and sensibly. Thanks for understanding and support, GrumpyMonkey. That does not help at all to work with such potentially great product efficiently. Just want to join the crowd & asking for some settings just to adjust font size in the app.įor people with impaired vision it's particularly crusial - very difficult to see at glance all your tag's names, a name of the notebook etc. I'm not burning with the desire to see it myself, but on the other hand, it does seem like a fairly basic and easy-to-justify feature. And, for visually impaired users, it really helps to have control over these elements. In the case of basic textual elements like the font family and text size, though, I'd say that is a fair criticism. That's what people always say - a notetaking app ought to have X or it isn't a notetaking app at all. But why? A notetaking app that doesn't allow you to change the font size does seem a bit strange. EN can already change the font size within notes, extending that capability/scalability to the structure of the page should be do-able. There are some apps, for people with vision limitations, that can make more subtle adjustments without ruining all your screen elements, but they are pricey & not really a solution. I strongly advise against doing that via you Monitor or Display Preferences. Adjusting the DPI affects, as you say, every app, all the territory on your screen like menus & docks & icons, and it can make things very fuzz. That is an extreme and disruptive barely-solution to a problem that should be resolved within the app. Although this affects all apps which may not be what you are looking for? individually (all part of windows screen settings). Ideally, I'd like to see both desktop applications give us control over all aspects of the user interface.Īctually Grumpy in Windows you can adjust the DPI of the whole screen which EN responds too as well as menu text, titles etc. However, in this case it should be noted that the Windows app, which usually has more features, actually lacks control over anything besides the note content, so in a sense, the Mac app is matching the features available on Windows. I am hoping the missing font control is something they plan to add back into the app later. I cannot imagine how a single font family / text size would be better for the user experience. PS Alternatively, couldn't you just make the zoom feature that we use for the notes themselves apply to the program icons? e you in 2022 (if my eyes haven't been worn out by all the squinting.). And they all represent people for whom whom Evernote is becoming extremely hard to use. HD, ultra wide screens, 4k - you may have noticed that these things are EVERYWHERE now. It should not be extremely difficult to do so, and with every passing month, the number of users finding themselves doing this increases. Let's face it, we use that list constantly. I can honestly say that by far the most annoying thing about using a very large screen is having to constantly lean across the table to squint at my list of notes in Evernote. I suppose the rationalization that most people don't have high-res screens was.more or less sane in 2012. Always encouraging when you search to see if there's a way to do something fairly essential.only to find the same request has been been falling on deaf ears.FOR FIVE.
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