1. I agree that type is typically too small. Even Bootstrap's 14px default, while better than the popular 12px and 11px, is inferior to the browser's default of 16px. Funnily enough, on the website for my new business which I'm polishing off now, I include no text below 16px. The result? It's always readable.
2. I personally have complained of text too large: by default, tumblr seems to have this utterly idiotic notion of treating my 10" Android tablet (with Firefox as the browser) as a mobile browser, applying some extremely strange mathematics and winding up displaying massive text, with a line-height of almost an inch. This results in a page that on my laptop fits in one screen (to be fair, at 16px it'd be a page and a half) taking a couple of dozen screenfuls, with my finger needing to work overtime scrolling. All this in spite of the fact that the laptop's viewport's physical size is less than double that of the tablet's. This article's site is one of an extreme minority that don't break on my tablet. Many WordPress blogs are also tedious; I have come to hate WPTouch. (Admittedly, I don't have a phone, so I don't know exactly how it affects the experience there, but far too many sites on the Internet treat a tablet as a third- or even seventy-ninth-class citizen, actively destroying their site for some reason.)
1. I agree that type is typically too small. Even Bootstrap's 14px default, while better than the popular 12px and 11px, is inferior to the browser's default of 16px. Funnily enough, on the website for my new business which I'm polishing off now, I include no text below 16px. The result? It's always readable.
2. I personally have complained of text too large: by default, tumblr seems to have this utterly idiotic notion of treating my 10" Android tablet (with Firefox as the browser) as a mobile browser, applying some extremely strange mathematics and winding up displaying massive text, with a line-height of almost an inch. This results in a page that on my laptop fits in one screen (to be fair, at 16px it'd be a page and a half) taking a couple of dozen screenfuls, with my finger needing to work overtime scrolling. All this in spite of the fact that the laptop's viewport's physical size is less than double that of the tablet's. This article's site is one of an extreme minority that don't break on my tablet. Many WordPress blogs are also tedious; I have come to hate WPTouch. (Admittedly, I don't have a phone, so I don't know exactly how it affects the experience there, but far too many sites on the Internet treat a tablet as a third- or even seventy-ninth-class citizen, actively destroying their site for some reason.)