Intel’s commitment to accessibility and open-source initiatives led VML’s research team to discover that developer eye strain was a significant issue, with no typefaces specifically addressing it. To strengthen connections with the developer community, VML and Frere-Jones Type collaborated with low-vision and legally blind developers, focusing on legibility and gathering feedback to refine the design. By releasing the typeface as open-source on GitHub, Intel built trust with developers. The project resulted in many awards, positive feedback on inclusivity, reduced eye strain, improved coding accuracy and enhanced brand affinity, with many devs adopting it as their default coding typeface.
The Font that Saves Eyes
The only monospace font designed to reduce eyestrain for computer programmers
Client
- Intel
オフィス
- Kansas City
- United States
Intel Corporation
Intel is investing heavily in open-source initiatives and engaging developers to boost brand perception and increase interaction. Monospaced typefaces, crucial for developers, play a role in this strategy. In recent years, Intel has been viewed by many developers as a grandfather of technology, with newer competitors seen as more cutting-edge. To address this, Intel reaffirmed its commitment to the software engineering community. Through a series of initiatives, the company aims to rebuild credibility and solve unmet needs within the developer space, positioning itself as a key partner in fostering innovation and collaboration.
Research illuminated that, while a variety of typeface design projects have tackled issues of accessibility and legibility for general readers, none have explicitly attempted to improve legibility and tackle eyestrain for those who spend hours intensely focused on screen text and need it most: the developer community.
To ensure improved legibility, we designed the Intel One Mono typeface along with a panel of low-vision developers who were asked to use the typeface as their default coding tool and provide feedback at each round of design. Designing for the 1% improves everyone’s experience. Legibility isn’t only glyph design, but every component of a typeface’s context for the user. Character and word-shape differentiation, weight pairing contrasts and leading are some of the levers activated to achieve an effective result for the intensive coding experience of developers.
We made the typeface free and open-source, releasing it on GitHub, the most visited developer site, to gather input for future improvements. It’s also available on Intel.com. The release sparked debates about the design, especially the curly braces, but feedback from our low-vision and legally blind panel was key to design decisions. Post-release opinions focused on functionality. The font’s success is proof that beauty and harmony can’t solely define good design, and quantitative data was and continues to be invaluable to the process.
Fred Shallcrass
Frere-Jones Type
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Awards
2024 Fast Company Innovation Awards
Type Design
2024 Fast Company Innovation by Design
Accessible Design
Honorable Mention
2023 Cannes Lions
Typography - Brand & Communications Design
Shortlist
2024 D&AD
Type Design & Lettering - Typeface Family
Shortlist
The Andy Awards
2024
Gold
2024 TDC Awards
Single Axis Type Family
Gold
2024 One Show
Design For Good
Merit
2023 New York Festivals
Design - Product Design
Silver
TDC Awards
2024
Gold
2024 The One Show Awards
Design for Good
Merit Award
New York Festivals
2024
Silver and Bronze
2023 New York Festivals
Hell's Kitchen - Product Design
Bronze