On 08/03/12 15:36, John Doe wrote: > From: John Doe<jdmls at yahoo.com> > >> Hum... playing with the gnome font settings does not change anything >> in either firefoxes... Really? I'm trying this again now... What I'm doing is: 1. Start firefox 2. Select System->Preferences->Fonts from the desktop panel menu. 3. In the "Font Preferences" window, click "Details...". 4. Select "None" under "Smoothing:" in the "Font Rendering Details" window - where "Grayscale" or "Subpixel (LCDs)" was selected in the past. 5. Restart firefox ... while inspecting the texts in the desktop menu and the firefox menu bar. Now, the destop menu text clearly changes after the step 4 - the letters get a somewhat thinner and more jagged appearance. The firefox menu bar stays the same. However, on the system running firefox 3.6.26, after step 5 it changes, too, so that it looks like the one on the desktop. With firefox 10, there is no change even after this step. Note that I'm testing the old firefox on a system that has not got the latest set of updates, though, i.e. it's still essentially on CentOS 5.7. In other words, other packages may be affecting the behaviour. > But if you meant changing something else than rendering: if change > the "Application font", it changes in both firefoxes instantaneously... Yep. That works for me, too. > Maybe check in /etc/fonts/conf.d/... It contains a lot of files, but I suppose I'll have to look through all of them... - Toralf > > JD > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos This e-mail, including any attachments and response string, may contain proprietary information which is confidential and may be legally privileged. It is for the intended recipient only. If you are not the intended recipient or transmission error has misdirected this e-mail, please notify the author by return e-mail and delete this message and any attachment immediately. If you are not the intended recipient you must not use, disclose, distribute, forward, copy, print or rely on this e-mail in any way except as permitted by the author.