I think it's wrong. I've spent time playing with it and it doesn't seem to work for most reading disability issues that are "letter-form-impacted." Times New Roman remains better. In Read Regular the "g" and "y" are nice but the "b-d-p-q" sewuence is less distinct than in most fonts, and to help distinction "a" might as well look like the typewriter version for distinction. Plus, while small caps are a good writing tool (why not just learn one letter form?) they wipe things out for "word shape recognition" readers, which is a lot of people. My morning rant.
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I think it's wrong. I've spent time playing with it and it doesn't seem to work for most reading disability issues that are "letter-form-impacted." Times New Roman remains better. In Read Regular the "g" and "y" are nice but the "b-d-p-q" sewuence is less distinct than in most fonts, and to help distinction "a" might as well look like the typewriter version for distinction. Plus, while small caps are a good writing tool (why not just learn one letter form?) they wipe things out for "word shape recognition" readers, which is a lot of people. My morning rant.
Wow, that's neato.
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