Partially blind guy here with an #a11y PSA:

I'm seing a trend away from "Text Size" sliders or old fashioned font dialogs and towards a few set choices "Default", "Large","Larger", etc.

This is a HUGE step backwards. Your 'larger' is *never* large enough for my crazy busted eyeballs when I'm using my 34" monitor.

If you must do this, please be sure to add "Largest" and even "ZOMG ARE YOU SERIOUS LARGE" options. Some of us REALLY need them, even if it seems insane to you.

@feoh

Yeah I just set my Emacs minibuffer font to be like 140 point. I realized I couldn't see it and was just doing things by memory, even if things get cut off now I'll see something. It looks even more ridiculous in person because my monitor is huge.

@smyth It's like as graphical interfaces become more entrenched and 'mature' they move further and further away from actually being able to accommodate people with non normative interface needs.

It's frustrating. I'd say I'd just go back to 100% text mode all the time, but the web and everything else is so inherently image oriented these days that could get pretty rough pretty quick.

@feoh @smyth

One of the things I really like about running my own web services is that I get to control the damn CSS.

So I guarantee high contrast, decent colors, no minuscule type, and white space where I want it instead of where a "UX designer" who has never taken an accessibility class has decided it should be.

Oh, and one of the things I like about running XFCE on X11 is that writing a window manager theme is easy. So the focus window has a big cyan border, and unfocus windows have narrow but distinct black.white.black borders and high contrast titlebars. Because it should be bloody obvious which window has focus, and easy to find the new window that you want next.

@dashdsrdash @smyth
<kidding>
Oh, so theming your desktop is GOOD, but theming your editor is BAD?

A strange breed, these old school sysadmins are :)
</kidding>

I'm rather enjoying a similar level of customization capability in KDE, but mostly I don't need to write my own theme per-se, as I can tweak existing ones with a fair bit of precision, and KDE is super strict about things like text size being adjustable all the way down.

Because this conversation has delightfully meandered all over the map, I was originally posting about my frustration on installing the Office365 Outlook client, because I'm struggling a bit to find the right notification mechanism for meetings.

I fell back to the web version, but that has problems too.

Note that the problem here is calendaring, which can't be readily solved with 'read yer mail with mutt, brush your teeth, etc." :)

@feoh @smyth

I didn't say that theming your editor was bad. I said that, for me, becoming used to excess editor configs is a problem because I am frequently on some new machine where I do not have the time to set up a new config, nor is it appropriate -- so I would get more annoyed at not having my tools than learning to live with what I've got.

I suppose I could always cut-n-paste to my local, edit, then cut-n-paste back, but... no.

Calendaring: gaaah.

@dashdsrdash @feoh

Is this a good time to say that I do at least some of my calendering in Emacs? Probably not.

I've gone all the way to the other side of the spectrum, but then again, I'm visually imapired, and basically can't use a computer unless I've SSHed into it and messed around, or I've installed a screen reader, so it makes sense to go all the way and customize everything. I try to have a few working machines at any time so I don't get stuck and I can use one to bootstrap another.

@smyth @dashdsrdash Glad to hear you can do some calendaring in emacs. The choice to use Outlook/Exchange wasn't mine, and we do the best we can to live within the systems we've forced upon us sometimes, right? :)

@feoh @dashdsrdash

Yeah, and it's pretty hard to keep things within Emacs. Calendering is one of those things that tends to be forced on you. Sorry you have to use Outlook, I'm really not a fan, though at least the accessibility for screen readers is pretty good.