Good exercise though.Yes, books can be really heavy, especially hardback books.
Same here, I have a kindle, barely used. Just can’t get on with it. I do have the kindle app on my IPad Pro though and that works a treat. Before. I did used to test students with reading problems and sometimes got down to having them read printed texts through a coloured sheet of plastic with either a shiny surface or a rough surface. Sometimes that worked if they had something described as Irlen’s Syndrome. Some black typeface on white paper is quite difficult for some.I was given a Kindle about 3 years ago. It is still sitting in a drawer in this desk - unused. One of my research projects for my Masters was to find out if people could read more easily from a printed text than from a screen. That was years ago now and screens have improved although I still miss typos on screen. Back then, it was possible to prove that people read less efficiently from screens. My eyesight is not as good as it used to be and I find text on screen, in many cases, is very difficult to read, even using my glasses.
I was once part of some research looking at fonts (before the dyslexia fonts were around). We tested a host of fonts, font sizes and paper colour on several hundred children who reported reading difficulties and found that for a significant number, Ariel 14 on a pale pastel blue paper helped the most children. I think that the dyslexia fonts are based upon DejaVu Sans.I find Kindle better to read from @Annb
I use the dyslexic typeface. It is a lifesaver for me.
Otherwise Perpetua is the next best, and third is Times New Roman.
I generally need a serif typeface.
I am no good with a sans serif typeface.
I Also find it hard holding a book with my arthritic hands,
Smashing photoFbg 6.7
Busy today...
Wildlife nighttime video
Cat Jade's busy night maybe watching a mouse first! - Fox appears concerned for Jade - Badger spoils Jade's night & wrecks her bed
2 min 14 secs
Creative... a photo of my holly berries...this year, the birds have not eaten them!
Have to do some stuff...
Have your best day...
View attachment 65214
“Shield wall”@Annb
Those Norman's only got Britain by cheating us Danes and Saxons, we fight clean wars with swords and battle axes and have to run the the length of the country and fight tired against some foe who can't wield a battle axe or turn a man into a spread eagle and we are paying for centuries. You Norman's should fight properly
Lindis fairhair.
I was always on the side of the Anglo Saxons in that war. Poor old Harold - was literally fighting a losing battle there. I have Godwins in my ancestry as well, so partly Norse. But then, so were the Frankified Normans. How about the battles that led to the Angles and Saxons grabbing the land from the poor old Britons? Was that a dirty war as well? In terms of origins, as I said to Neil yesterday, we were, on one line, descended either from a Norman cheesemaker or a jewish tax collector-cum-farmer (Ferminger); on another from a Danish aristocrat (Godwin); from another from somebody who dealt in wool (Woolball); free thinking Quakers (when everyone was supposed to be Anglican); Welsh men and women, common or garden agricultural workers, master builders, ostlers and blacksmiths. Sounds OK to me.@Annb
Those Norman's only got Britain by cheating us Danes and Saxons, we fight clean wars with swords and battle axes and have to run the the length of the country and fight tired against some foe who can't wield a battle axe or turn a man into a spread eagle and we are paying for centuries. You Norman's should fight properly
Lindis fairhair.
Dyslexic students in my classes seemed to have differing needs. Most said they found seriffed fonts to be most helpful (often italicised to give lines across the text). All preferred a wider line spacing. Some preferred yellow backgrounds, some blue. Perhaps, like diabetes, it's not a question of one size fits all. Perhaps there was an element of older students having made their own decisions by the time they were approaching 20. That's one thing that computerised note production helped with. I could start with a basic text and font and make adjustments for individuals very easily, once preferences had been established, to tailor notes and workbooks to the students' needs.I was once part of some research looking at fonts (before the dyslexia fonts were around). We tested a host of fonts, font sizes and paper colour on several hundred children who reported reading difficulties and found that for a significant number, Ariel 14 on a pale pastel blue paper helped the best. I think that the dyslexia fonts are based upon DejaVu Sans.
Beautiful holly berries - so cheery in these dark, miserable days.Fbg 6.7
Busy today...
Wildlife nighttime video
Cat Jade's busy night maybe watching a mouse first! - Fox appears concerned for Jade - Badger spoils Jade's night & wrecks her bed
2 min 14 secs
Creative... a photo of my holly berries...this year, the birds have not eaten them!
Have to do some stuff...
Have your best day...
View attachment 65214
Funny thing, vision. When neuropsychologist Larry Weizkranz demonstrated that there is residual visual function in the total absence of striate cortex (V1) in both monkey and humans back in the 1980’s he showed just how much we have to learn about the relationship between our visual system and such things as visually guided action, motor memory and micro muscle control. Eyes are just the tip of our very complex visual system. So called Irlen Syndrome, where text seems to blur, move, run down off the page etc., is sometimes clumped into the overarching word ‘dyslexia’ but I’m not sure. So much to doDyslexic students in my classes seemed to have differing needs. Most said they found seriffed fonts to be most helpful (often italicised to give lines across the text). All preferred a wider line spacing. Some preferred yellow backgrounds, some blue. Perhaps, like diabetes, it's not a question of one size fits all. Perhaps there was an element of older students having made their own decisions by the time they were approaching 20. That's one thing that computerised note production helped with. I could start with a basic text and font and make adjustments for individuals very easily, once preferences had been established, to tailor notes and workbooks to the students' needs.
Poor old jade....Fbg 6.7
Busy today...
Wildlife nighttime video
Cat Jade's busy night maybe watching a mouse first! - Fox appears concerned for Jade - Badger spoils Jade's night & wrecks her bed
2 min 14 secs
Creative... a photo of my holly berries...this year, the birds have not eaten them!
Have to do some stuff...
Have your best day...
View attachment 65214
Wot about us Celts...@Annb
Those Norman's only got Britain by cheating us Danes and Saxons, we fight clean wars with swords and battle axes and have to run the length of the country and fight tired against some foe who can't wield a battle axe or turn a man into a spread eagle and we are paying for centuries. You Norman's should fight properly
Lindis fairhair.
Hi @BildadI thought perhaps I would post with all this chat about books (I read this and other threads every day but rarely post) I own and run a used book shop and have done for the past 40 years. The Internet has been a life saver as the foot fall in the shop has fallen to almost none most weeks but I sell all over the world via the net. As you can imagine I am most firmly in favour of real books over e books. I do realise that e book readers are a necessity for some or they would be unable to read at all.
To keep in the spirit of this thread my fbg was either 4.4 or 6.1 depending on if you are an automatic bg follower or a manual one. I find the Libre (when I wear one) to often read lower than a finger prick.
Thank you all for another year of encouragement.
Wishing you God's peace for 2024
My problem with this particular book was that it looked like a children's historical novel but was not appropriate for children. I didn't want to keep it but I felt that the same mistake would be made if I returned it to the charity shop and some other child would access it, so couldn't give it back. Thus - it burned. Sacrilege no doubt, but my responsibility to my child, and others, was more important.One of the biggest things is the growth of knowledge.
In astronomy, it is the latest from the new telescope photos that have the boffins rethinking big bang etc
In archaeology, the latest new sites in area all over that have historians trying to understand our pre history.
Egyptology, that is far older and scientifically advanced than first thought. And mainly Nubian.I
The South American civilisation, the pre Columbian civilisations.
String theory, and loads more.
Book burning, religious dogma, Royalty, tribal history, political history has censored, hidden, banned and prohibited knowledge. Censorship has confounded the growth of our understanding of the universe.
Brexit is the same ideology!
I read through a green or yellow coloured sheet...I have been told I have Irlen's syndrome. I did have green tinted glasses for close up reading etc, but they were expensive. And then when your prescription changes, then it is another pair of the expensive green glasses...so went over to clear reading glasses and used a coloured sheet...Same here, I have a kindle, barely used. Just can’t get on with it. I do have the kindle app on my IPad Pro though and that works a treat. Before. I did used to test students with reading problems and sometimes got down to having them read printed texts through a coloured sheet of plastic with either a shiny surface or a rough surface. Sometimes that worked if they had something described as Irlen’s Syndrome. Some black typeface on white paper is quite difficult for some.
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