• @[email protected]
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    212 years ago

    What is “AI design” in the context of an individual email?

    Strange phrasing. Like something a robot would say to try to sound human.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      702 years ago

      It’s not my content, but yeah that guy was really chill about it. I would be absolutely mortified if I sent the first email.

      • @[email protected]
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        132 years ago

        I believe they’re referring to an alternative font, Atkinson hyperlegible. The person in the image is using (I believe) Open Dyslexic, and I think the person you’re replying to is suggesting Atkinson hyperlegible as an alternative for anyone who has tried Open Dyslexic

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          +1 on Atkinson Hyperlegible. It looks prettier (IMO) whilst still being legible. Wish it had more weights tho

          • Kyoyeou (Ki jəʊ juː)
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            32 years ago

            I edited my comment, sorry I was at work, but indeed I was talking about Atkinson Hyperglide Font! I used a lot Open Dyslexic before personally, and switching to Atkinson Hyperlegible felt as good to read then Open Dyslexic, while also looking a bit less weird to some colleagues, and being quite Beautiful, I’m very happy with it, getting the best of both worlds!

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      That’s ”open dyslexic”. As far as I’m aware, it’s a font specifically designed to be easily readable by dyslexic people

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          Well letters have a definite bottom. It probably helps brains to not just flip things like p and b easily.

          Letters aren’t just mirrors either. q and p are actually different. Letters like d and b have different directional flairs instead of just being a mirror.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 years ago

          By making the bottom of each lettet bold it help guide the ryrs. Akso all grammar marks .,! Etc are extra large. Also they increase the space betwen letters and words. i use it on my devices when i can. It helps

        • @[email protected]
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          222 years ago

          Im dyslexic and can confirm the font is ugly as hell but significantly helps readability.

          Dyslexia varies person to person but the general concept is that letters can flip horizontally, vertically, change locations or jitter / fuzz. It’s not that you actually see them that way, it’s a brain interpretation issue. It’s kind of like the difference between speed reading and normal reading out loud. You look at a word and your brain recognizes the word as a whole and what it means and how it sounds. A dyslexic generally cant make that connection and have to see words as individual letters that are sounded out in order to make the word. So you see soup and know its food and you see soap and know you wash with it. But a dyslexic those two words are almost exactly the same. So we need the rest of the sentence for context to know what that word is… and the rest of the sentence may require the previous sentence to know the context of other words…

          Think of a word as a picture. Together all of the parts of the picture have to come together to form say the Mona Lisa. But if you took all the parts of her face and mixed them up… it would still be the Mona Lisa… but it wouldnt make any sense. Having the thickened parts on the bottom of each letter help anchor the letters as well as having every letter / number be unique helps your brain to interpret everything correctly “faster”. Most dyslexic people, unless they have a really bad case, can learn to read but they end up reading a lot slower than a normal person. This font helps speed it up… to bad it’s ugly as sin.

          I dont know if that makes any sense or if it’s just me rambling…

        • @[email protected]OPM
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          312 years ago

          It kinda “anchors” the text so the letters stay where they’re meant to. A tiny spot in centre of my vision is blurry, sometimes I miss words in the middle of a sentence. For some reason this font helps with that.

            • @[email protected]OPM
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              2 years ago

              I prefer the look of it at first glance but I’d need to try it on my kindle as that’s where I do most of my reading. Afaik kindle only supports open dyslexic.

              EDIT: @jackbydev I just wanted to say thanks for the tip on the font. I’ve been using it on my kindle since you told me about it. It’s doesn’t work quite as well as open dyslexic for me but it works enough for me to use it as my default font - and it’s so much nicer to look at!

          • @[email protected]
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            22 years ago

            Makes sense and I appreciate all the answers. I’m actually dyslexic myself, but it’s mild and more likely to jumble coming out than going in so I’ve never felt the need to prioritize practicality over aesthetic preference. And while I knew some fonts helped I didn’t know what actually made them help. But at the same time I do hope we keep moving towards more and more dyslexia friendly fonts being defaults. Especially as we can get them more and more aesthetically varied to fill different moods and tones

      • @[email protected]
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        92 years ago

        It can even help with attention-focussing issues like in ADHD. Marvelous invention, really.

        • @[email protected]
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          102 years ago

          Ironically i find it vastly more difficult to focus on than normal fonts, all i want is to FUCKING MAKE GLYPHS LOOK DIFFERENT TO EACH OTHER

          iIlL| if these don’t look OBVIOUSLY different in a font it is a bad font and must die.

        • @[email protected]
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          52 years ago

          I bought a Spanish textbook recently and it uses multiple fonts throughout for this exact reason. I hadn’t seen in it in a physical book before but if it helps people I’m all for it.

      • FreshLight
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        12 years ago

        Except for the capital “I” it’ s really easy on the eye.

      • @[email protected]OPM
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        652 years ago

        I’m not dyslexic but I have macular issues which make reading a bit difficult. Switching to the open dyslexic font on my kindle has been a game changer.

  • Flying Squid
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    1302 years ago

    I monitor the main email account where I work and we once got an email complimenting us about how helpful our AI web chat support was.

    Our web chat support is all humans.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      Genuinely I could see it picking up on that satisfying questions and just saying “Sorry I’m autistic” if it gets backed into a corner lol

  • @[email protected]
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    14 months ago

    Yay! Opendyslexic font! 🥰 It’s either that or Comic Sans, or else I’m confusing my b’s with my d’s.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      Blasted into the stratosphere. Holy fuck.

      I wish I could respond this way at work but I don’t want others to know.

    • @[email protected]OPM
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      192 years ago

      Thank you. Someone messaged me the same. I don’t think reposting publicly posted tweets counts as doxxing, I was just erring on the side of caution. But I’ll use the box-fill method in future. Thanks again!

  • JackbyDev
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    402 years ago

    Is it possible they think “Proton Mail” is some robot thing?

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        That things appears by default if you are a protonmail user. You can manually remove that though.

        • friedtofu
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          42 years ago

          ^

          For those that don’t know, you can only disable the footer signature on the desktop or mobile web client(in desktop mode). It’s kinda of tucked away but once you login, at the top right there’s a settings menu at the top right(with a cog icon) -> open the drop-down -> settings ->