marco:

Given how well Jeff Bezos usually prioritizes reading and legibility, why are his announcements on the Amazon frontpage always images of poorly rendered text?

Because allowing us to copy and paste his text would be heresy?

marco:

Given how well Jeff Bezos usually prioritizes reading and legibility, why are his announcements on the Amazon frontpage always images of poorly rendered text?

Because allowing us to copy and paste his text would be heresy?

(Reblogged from marco)

Notes

  1. lakita-dohn reblogged this from intranation
  2. deletingpermissions reblogged this from marco
  3. rmpenguino reblogged this from marco
  4. fearful reblogged this from marco and added:
    Because allowing us to copy...text would be heresy?
  5. quiddle reblogged this from marco and added:
    bothered me as well.
  6. quatermain said: …because he’d rather you paid for a device than getting it for free? [/cynicism]
  7. czottmann reblogged this from marco and added:
    That has bugged me for some time as well.
  8. eportelance reblogged this from marco
  9. cooperottum reblogged this from marco and added:
    full experience by visiting Amazon’s homepage. It really does look awful.
  10. danielfallenstein reblogged this from marco
  11. binarymentalist reblogged this from marco
  12. intranation reblogged this from marco and added:
    In other news, I kind...want a new Kindle.
  13. michaelychang reblogged this from marco
  14. jonadair reblogged this from marco and added:
    I found myself thinking...exact same thing while researching the new Kindle over the...
  15. jimcloudman said: Maybe they’re paranoid about how text renders in different browsers. I know sometimes Internet Explorer can be quirky about it. That’s the only valid excuse I see, though, unless their backend can’t handle custom text blocks.