The closest option now is “GPU compositing on all pages”, with the description: But, it appears that in dev release 16.0.891.0, they’ve modified/renamed the GPU-related flags. I remembered seeing those GPU flag options, so I tried checking them. I just started seeing the same problem, so I’m glad I saw this a few days ago! My issue was only resolved by modifying the font setting in Chrome, though. ![]() Regardless, if this is the sort of thing that’s plaguing you I’d suggest taking a look. I don’t know if GPU Accelerated Canvas 2D is on by default or not, if it’s an artifact from previous Chrome beta installations, or if I turned it on sometime in the past. One reboot later I was able to re-enable “GPU Accelerated Canvas 2D” and have it all work correctly. The fix? Downloading and installing the latest versions of drivers directly from the video card vendor, probably Intel, ATI, or NVIDIA (if you’re unfamiliar with how to tell what you have go to the “Device Manager” control panel, then expand the “Display adapters” tree). GPU rendering sounds like a good idea, though, and the graphics card in my desktop should have this capability. ![]() I disabled it, pressed the button on the bottom of the page to restart Chrome, and the problem went away. In my case, “GPU Accelerated Canvas 2D” was enabled in Chrome. You can see the options in “about:flags” for that. Applications like Photoshop and Chrome have started to take advantage of that by offloading certain types of work to the GPU. Graphics Processing Units, or GPUs, have specialized hardware for shading that have enormous floating-point and vector computational power, way beyond what a general purpose CPU has. In Chrome, I went to the location “about:flags” to look at the settings for GPU acceleration. That fixed some of the jaggedness of the text rendering in Chrome for me.Ģ. I enabled ClearType with the default settings by going to the Display control panel, choosing “Adjust ClearType text” on the left, and checking the box entitled “Turn on ClearType.” It walks you through a short wizard to tune ClearType, which you should find self-explanatory, like an eye exam. Very polite of it, unlike Internet Explorer which runs with ClearType enabled all the time. Chrome obeys the system preference and will not use it if it’s disabled. ClearType is a technology in Microsoft Windows to do sub-pixel anti-aliasing of text to smooth the edges of fonts, making them look less jagged. Here’s how I fixed it on my Windows 7 hosts, and based on some of my reading in forums and bug reports I suspect it may work on other versions of Windows, too. That’s like WTF levels of crappy, right? It was happening all the time, on all different web sites. The image on the left is what I saw in Chrome, and the image on the right is what I should have seen when visiting a particular web site: I don’t mean to be a snob about it, but I look at this thing many hours every day, and I’d like it to work right. I get fonts with missing pieces, fonts that don’t render completely, text that is completely absent, and text with severely pixelated edges. In fact, it’s been my biggest complaint about that browser. I’ve been having a heck of a time with terrible font rendering in Chrome.
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