Quote:
Originally Posted by speakingtohe
Nepotism is the only logical reason IMO.
Still in Kobo's defense, most ereaders do not have options to make the menus and options larger.
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How does nepotism apply here?
As for accessibility and software, that has always confused me. One of the great things about computers is that it's easy to make things accessible. It's not like books, especially in the olden days, when you'd have to typeset a separate large print edition and a braille edition and record an audiobook to address people with visual impairments and limited mobility. One file can address all of the above.
Alas, it is also a difficult battle to fight. I remember the early days of the web when people were doing funky things with images (sans alt tags) that screen readers and braille devices couldn't handle or when people were creating funky layouts that were hard for those assistive technologies found hard to follow. The solutions were simple and fast to implement, but people just didn't want to do so.