Reading downhill to prevent reading going downhill
Words, the stuff of which communication is made, have always conveyed meaning, clearly or not. The ease with which words can be read has been taken a step forward by one Paolo Bizziocchi of Riccione, Italy.
Do you know him? Probably not, I guess. Well, he happens to be the one responsible for proposing a patent for changing the way the printed word, as we know it, is printed.
His tall order is that he wants printers and printer manufacturers to ensure that words are not printed in a straight line but instead on a curve, like this.
The entire text presentation looks a bit untidy and quite unkempt, if you ask me. That certainly would not work very well for a business or non-picture-book presentation.
According to this 'wacky' patent, that little change would make it easier for humans to read the printed word much more quickly.
I am all for getting more children, for example, to read a book more often than watch television or music videos, but how the heck do you print in a curve without breaking the rules of formatting in word processors and typewriters?
For example, when you use the command CONTROL+ T to produce a hanging indent in a Microsoft Word document written in English, how would you print that out in a curve?
No matter the benefits of reading on a curve, give me my words printed on a straight line, if you please.
May be I am selfish and should be thinking more about those who do not like reading and should be encouraged to do so.
Of course, everyone is usually resistant to new concepts initially, Give me time....



No comments:
Post a Comment