
Earlier this year, the KDE team
released the highly-anticipated 4th major revision of the KDE desktop. Instead of bringing evolutionary changes, KDE 4.0 effectively delivered a complete rewrite of KDE, and as a consequence the first release of the KDE 4 branch lacked a lot of features of KDE 3.x, while also being quite unstable and rough. Many even complained the KDE team shouldn't have released KDE 4.0 as 4.0, but rather as a developer preview release or something similar. During this storm of criticism, the KDE team calmly pointed out that KDE 4.1 would fix many, many of the issues people had with KDE 4.0. Starting today, there's no more pointing towards KDE 4.1: KDE 4.1
has been released today.
Member since:
2007-02-17
Woosh yourself.
This was the original (and bogus) complaint: "Go to the same site using Linux and you're faced with font that don't match, size that are (most of the time) too small. I'm no Font expert, but it's a HUGE problem with Linux and one that put me off of using it."
The solution to this is: install the Liberation fonts, set your browser to render using Liberation fonts, and ensure that the system's dpi setting is correct.
Why Liberations fonts?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberation_fonts
Two reasons (both are quotes from the link I gave):
(1) "These fonts are metric-compatible with Monotype Corporation's Arial, Times New Roman, and Courier New respectively. "
(2) "They are available under the GNU General Public License with a font embedding exception, which states that documents embedding these fonts do not automatically fall under the GNU GPL."
The fonts are metric equivalents of common webfonts. They will therefore render correctly, at the correct size on screen (provided that the system's dpi setting for the display screen is correct).
Therefore, on a Linux system, installing and using Liberation fonts is exactly and precisely a sloution for the "problem" that the OP complained about.
It turns out that the solution IS largely all about the availability of appropriate fonts under an appropriate license for use on a Linux system (ie, the font's license must allow for re-distribution to downstream recipients).
Don't sprout about things that you don't understand would be my advice.