Spyke
lemmy.world

The US State Department only just directed its employees to use Calibri for memos earlier this year. The State Department had been using Times New Roman instead since 2004.

Lmao

76
SGGreply
lemmy.world

Honestly, they have probably kept times new Roman for other things, as a serif font it's much harder to make the mistake between a capital I and a lower case l.

Ambiguity can cause problems.

At the same time, I agree, lmao.

34
lemmy.world

How is a new font "more inclusive"? This word has been co-opted by corpo drones and has lost its meaning.

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hardypartreply
feddit.de

It's little things like better disambiguation between uppercase i and lowercase L.

16

It's like 'gaslighting' or 'reboot', or various others: it gains a little traction then everyone finds an excuse to use it, appropriate or not.

3
sh.itjust.works

Meanwhile professors still be requiring essays done in Times New Roman, and all actual documents are done in the default because as long as its legible it doesn't matter.

Oh except for a court case in 2044 when a lawyer notices "Aha! This document is dated from 2020 but the Aptos font wasn't introduced until 2023, this document is forged!" Yes I can cite precedent, Your Honor; something similar happened with Callibri, introduced circa 2007.

51

Meanwhile professors still be requiring essays done in Times New Roma

A font I strongly dislike. Particularly in any electronic media it just looks unsightly to me for some reason I have never been able to articulate. I do tend to like sans-serif fonts more in general, but I don't think that's entirely it.

I hope to never return to an environment where someone is going to complain about just using Arial or similar.

14

Previously known as Bierstadt

Missed opportunity. Long live Beertown! 🍻

21

Hate would be a too strong word, but I’ve disliked it always. Much prefer Arial or even Verdana.

2
sh.itjust.works

Again? I still haven’t gotten over the switchover from Times New Roman to Calibri.

17
lemmy.world

It's honestly one of my favorite all purpose fonts, very clean, but has much more personality than other san-serif fonts like Helvetia or Noto.

2

It does, but because of that I feel it needs to be used a bit more sparingly. Helvetica (Neue) you can use the entire document; Segoe seems like it works best for headings and such, but maybe I’m wrong and someone does it well.

3
lemmy.world

They said it’s part of office 365 changed, does that mean my purchased single-machine license will not be getting a font change?

4
ijeffreply
lemdro.id

Do you have Bierstadt (this same font) and the other new fonts they launched a few years ago?

3

I honestly don’t know, I always used either calibri or times since I bought the license to help instruct a class during covid.

1
sh.itjust.works

The update hasn't happened for me yet, so we've still got some time to get used to Bierstadt a.k.a. Aptos. It has a curve at the bottom of the lower-case l like DejaVu Sans Mono and Cascadia Code, but without the top serif.

3
ijeffreply
lemdro.id

It also takes up more horizontal space than Calibri. I don't think I like it.

Top is Calibri, bottom is Bierstadt:

9

Agreed that it's wider at the same point size. Not sure if it's easier or harder to read yet, especially that "a". Seems a little heavier to counter display technology that makes old fonts so thin (and maybe superthin fonts falling out of fashion?). Probably blends better with Chinese, Japanese, and Korean due to being squarer and having shorter descenders, but I don't trust my eye.

3

Aptos is a part of a broader wave of features coming to Microsoft 365. We’re pushing to make the software more expressive and inclusive [...] Judging by the aesthetics, It appears more like an anti-feature to me.

3

I’ve never been a big fan of Calibri. Cambria was great, though. Aptos looks much better as a sans-serif font.

2

New posts on MS teams seem to have a different font today unless it’s my imagination. The old ones have the old font. Anyone else see this?

1