Forum Discussion
JohnnyGee
Dec 03, 2018Copper Contributor
Use special font for one recipient
Is there a way for Outlook 365 on Windows 10 to automatically use Verdana in size 22 when I send to one particular recipient who has vision problems? If so, how?
Dec 03, 2018
Hi Johnny,
Ah, I get you..Apologies about the link, probably a cut and paste issue on a phone but thanks for letting me know that conditional formatting doesn’t do it.
This should do it - lock the zoom
https://www.slipstick.com/outlook/adjust-outlooks-zoom-setting/
Let me know how you get on. Would be great to resolve this to make things easier on her vision. You would think lock zoom was an accessibility feature by default!
Best, Chris
Ah, I get you..Apologies about the link, probably a cut and paste issue on a phone but thanks for letting me know that conditional formatting doesn’t do it.
This should do it - lock the zoom
https://www.slipstick.com/outlook/adjust-outlooks-zoom-setting/
Let me know how you get on. Would be great to resolve this to make things easier on her vision. You would think lock zoom was an accessibility feature by default!
Best, Chris
Ian Cunningham
Dec 04, 2018Iron Contributor
Incredibly (although the zoom lock option is great - not sure why it has taken years - seems pretty simple) they still don't seem to have to considered that the reader might like to see the subject line, who I was sent to etc at the top of their outlook email - all this still obstinately stays at the default size.
I think that you still need to use the magnifier or zoom the whole display - which to some extent renders the zoom a bit redundant.
I don't get why, despite mentioning this for years, nothing has changed. I still wonder if I missed a trick and there is a setting to say "when I ask for the text to bigger so I can read it on this device at this resolution, please assume I'd like to do that for all of the email not just the body".
- Dec 04, 2018I fully agree Ian, in fact I would say that there needs to be either a whole reworking of accessibility options for current office applications, or another accessibility version of the applications. There are around 360,000 people in the UK alone registered as blind or partially sighted and 2 million living with sight loss. Then you have users with dyslexia, dyscalculia, colour blindness and so on. I don't personally feel that the needs of these users are fully met.
Between the lock zoom and the windows 10 magnifier - these are only workarounds from what you say is an actual solution.
Best, Chris