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Once in a while, I would VPN to my computer at work. I usually use either Consolas or Bitstream Vera Sans Mono on my choice of IDE.

But the problem is that, when remoting into a machine, an ClearType setting is turned off and thus both Consolas or Bitstream Vera Sans Mono look quite terrible and hurt my eyes after an hour or so.

What would be a good temporary fallback font of choice for this scenario?

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It's probably best you take a break for at least 5 minutes every hour to rest your eyes. Perhaps that will help. – Richie_W Apr 4 at 15:58
@Richie_W Thanks for the tip. But you know, when you are really in the zone, it's hard to look away from what you do... – Sung Meister Apr 4 at 16:10
@To those voted to close: I was not able to find a dupe post regarding this matter. Please be more courteous and specify the reason for voting to close. – Sung Meister Apr 4 at 16:15
It's definitely too many people here with the right to close. Almost everything receives a vote to close nowadays. Wasn't like that in the beginning... – divo Apr 4 at 16:56
@divo: originally, there was no voting - stuff just got closed, and we all went on with our lives. Then folks started whining... – Shog9 Apr 13 at 18:25

4 Answers

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Andale Mono.

One of the "Core Fonts for the Web" from MS. Was my first choice before Consolas.

Now available from sourceforge.

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It seems like that font is not free... – Sung Meister Apr 4 at 16:07
They are free to download and install... but not downloadable from MS directly any more. About to edit now I have the right link. – Richard Apr 4 at 16:14
@Richard: Thanks for the link. this actually does feel better on my eyes. – Sung Meister Apr 4 at 16:20
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The standard Courier New is my fallback font when Consolas looks bad.

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So far this looks the best on the remote machine. Thanks. – Sung Meister Apr 4 at 16:13
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Xorg's default fontfixed is great.

Defenetly a bitmap font and not a anti-aliased one. AA is great when writing letters, but really sucks on terminals.

Which one is cleaner? (AA left, non-AA right. Both magnified with xmag)

http://tux4u.de/aa-vs-non-aa.png

(even the non-AA one looks a bit unclean, it's because of the zoom check here for full-size version).

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If you're remoting in to an XP machine via Remote Desktop, you can enable ClearType support on the connection. With XP SP3, you can enable it via a registry modification:

[HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Terminal Server\WinStations]
"AllowFontAntiAlias"=dword:00000001

Reboot after doing this. You may also need to edit the remote desktop connection properties and turn on "Font smoothing" under the "Experience" tab.

Note that you can also accomplish this in versions of XP prior to SP3, but it requires a patch to termserv.dll, I believe.

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