Spyke
dubvee.org

Only if we continue the trend with sans-serif fonts.

As someone who struggles with dyslexia, I'd love for serif to be the norm again.

21
davidgroreply
lemmy.world

I don't have anything like that (to my knowledge) but I've still just never understood how it became acceptable to have multiple letters look the same or very similar.

9

My money's on lack of foresight and stubborn resistance to change.

4

That's interesting to hear, my work developed what's supposed to be a very accessible font that is sans serif and I was curious if this actually helped dyslexic people. My one dyslexic friend actually said it is better for them, but people are all different.

3
lemmy.world

Or, AIs who are programmed not to lie will start writing, "Hi, I'm AI," to avoid detection.

12
lemmy.dbzer0.com

"As an Al, I can only provide information I found scribbled on the walls of a public washroom. Or you can watch me Google awkwardly on my phone for a beat. Your choice."

9
foggyreply
lemmy.world

Man if my name was Al, all of my emails would start with "As an Al,"

5

I had the opposite when I was a kid. Playing Nightfire on PS2 with my friend adding in "AL" bots as extra players.

He wasn't very happy with me explaining that they are A.I.

7

Nicknames... In writing?

Aren't they more of a spoken word thing?

6

Some friend's kids came up to me the other day and asked if I knew the guy Weird A.I. who makes funny videos of songs on YouTube. It took me a little while to realise what was going on.

2

You reached the end

People with the nickname AL will likely change their nickname due to how it looks the same as A.I. | Spyke