Usually, when you click-drag and highlight text to be selected and copied, it’ll turn “blue” so you can see it. With Cufon, you won’t see the blue – but it’s still selected. Go ahead and try it. It copy/pastes just like anything else.
]]>Wondering what this would “actually” add to the speed of download if it were used throughout a site?
Any thoughts on this?
]]>I hadn’t even noticed the text zoom issue, since pretty much all the main browsers do a full zoom now. I can’t see this impacting most people (who I presume will use the default zoom on their browsers), but then, I haven’t really studied user patterns for that kind of behavior to have a clue how right or wrong I am on that.
The text selection thing does bother me. If it’s just being used in headlines, the impact should be fairly minimal (you can select surrounding text around the Cufon block and get the Cufon text along with it), but for your average wall of text it could be really obnoxious (not that I think you should be using Cufon for a wall of text.) It looks like they’re planning on making this possible (http://groups.google.com/group/cufon/browse_thread/thread/affeef69c0bd648/705dc106180e79db), but sadly, I have no idea as to when.
Even with these problems, I think I prefer Cufon from a speed and no-plugin stance to sIFR. I’d prefer native font-embedding via something like @font-face even more, but thanks to all the usual piracy fears I doubt that most font vendors will even be ready to consider allowing it even once full browser support exists.
]]>1. You can’t select Cufoned text like you can sIFRed text.
2. You can’t scale Cufoned text like you can sIFRed text. (Try zooming text [not the whole page] on your text page.)
I expect they’ll fix both these over time, but for the moment, there are ways in which sIFR is superior.
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