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by tiddchristopher
5230 days ago
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Typographically, this has horrible legibility: the letters are difficult to distinguish and recognize on an individual basis. This contributes to poor readability when the letters are grouped to form passages of text. This seems much more about compacting information in a human-decipherable format than creating a more readable alphabet. There are no ascenders or descenders in a traditional sense, no contours or apertures, and there is no stroke contrast. Also, the baseline is thrown off in many words. Put this all together, and you have text that's miserable to read. This isn't even to mention the difficulty of getting readers to abandon tradition. In all, I'd consider this an interesting experiment, but a practical failure. |
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The important part is that the words are not difficult to distinguish.
> Put this all together, and you have text that's miserable to read.
Interesting how you can come to that conclusion in a few minutes. It would be tempting to write off Kanji if you encountered it for the first time, no? Give it a try before you shoot it down out of hand.