On Wed, Oct 05, 2011 at 12:31:50PM -0700, Adam Williamson wrote:
Like I replied to ajax, I suspect when the problem of assuming
everything's 96dpi becomes simply too acute, instead of fixing
everything really properly so that all displays correct report their
size and all desktops actually do resolution independence perfectly so
it doesn't _matter_ if one of your displays is 98dpi and the other is
215dpi, everything still looks perfect, the industry will just wind up
with a slightly more sophisticated bodge where we have a few 'standard'
resolutions and just figure out which one your displays are closest to.
But that's still going to require some kind of sensible handling of the
case where one monitor is roughly 100dpi and the other is roughly
200dpi, unless we simply say 'you can't do that, all your displays have
to be in the same DPI Category'.
Sure, in the future when we have font renderers that run in GPU shaders
we can think about whether there's a plausible way to make applications
work when they have to deal with multiple DPIs simultaneously. But we
don't have any technology that can do any of that at the moment, and so
the simple fact is that right now the decision to have gnome run at
96dpi regardless of the output is an entirely rational one and anyone
who argues otherwise gets to explain how all the difficult bits would
work. The end.
--
Matthew Garrett | mjg59(a)srcf.ucam.org