G
Guest
You know in Windows XP, when you use the Accessibility Wizard, once you
set some "out-there" settings like XXL-sized fonts, abnormally fat
scrollbars, and unusual-looking title bars and buttons, you *can't*
revert them back to exactly the same as before you did it. Even when I
set "Windows XP" as the theme, and fiddling just about everything in the
Display Properties.
Now I wonder if this irrevocable behavior still exists in Windows Vista?
In fact, it might be a good idea to continue the Windows Vista legacy
and add another one: Accessibility Center, that groups everything in the
old "Accessibility" folder in the Programs menu and show them in just
one screen. More precisely, and I mean very importantly, any change in
the UI elements (windows and font size), should be changed in the
*standard* Control Panel applets, that is, Display Properties. That
means the changes are not made in a separate applet, which again I'll
stress the keyword: *integration*.
OK, OK. Let's just say in Accessibility Center and click "I'm 99%
Blind", Windows Vista will make the appropraite changes in Display
Properties, and that means you *can* revert every single change that
that command has made.
Feel free to share your opinion... or scold me back...
set some "out-there" settings like XXL-sized fonts, abnormally fat
scrollbars, and unusual-looking title bars and buttons, you *can't*
revert them back to exactly the same as before you did it. Even when I
set "Windows XP" as the theme, and fiddling just about everything in the
Display Properties.
Now I wonder if this irrevocable behavior still exists in Windows Vista?
In fact, it might be a good idea to continue the Windows Vista legacy
and add another one: Accessibility Center, that groups everything in the
old "Accessibility" folder in the Programs menu and show them in just
one screen. More precisely, and I mean very importantly, any change in
the UI elements (windows and font size), should be changed in the
*standard* Control Panel applets, that is, Display Properties. That
means the changes are not made in a separate applet, which again I'll
stress the keyword: *integration*.
OK, OK. Let's just say in Accessibility Center and click "I'm 99%
Blind", Windows Vista will make the appropraite changes in Display
Properties, and that means you *can* revert every single change that
that command has made.
Feel free to share your opinion... or scold me back...