I wonder if the font size issue is because of display resolution. It looks perfect on my screen, but I usually have to zoom into pages to make them readable.
I imagine it'd look fine on a MacBook Air. It doesn't on a 23" monitor, that's for sure.
I want to believe that the people behind it didn't bother to test it on different viewports, but I have created websites that look fine on everything from iPhones to large monitors without writing viewport-specific CSS.
It just seems incredibly sloppy, which is hard to believe for a company like ALA.
Nah, it looks fine. You can zoom in, if you want, of course, but it's entirely readable on a retina screen.
Of course, those have been very sparse in layout such as blogs, so it's not a solution that fits all, but in a case like this, it would work just as well.
A site like Hacker News obviously needs optimization for different viewports.
The intro in the linked article is set with a 24px font size and 960px width. For me, on a good desktop screen, that is uncomfortably large on both counts for a full paragraph of body text.
The main part of the article, set at 18px with about 700px width, is sensible IMHO.
It probably does. On my 13" MacBook I need to zoom out to read A List Apart now. If I zoom out two steps in Firefox it takes the font size from 18px to ~14px (guess), which is much more comfortable to read.
It's sad that we haven't gotten further with typography on the web. The solution to "some people have to zoom in" should't be "other people have to zoom out".
I feel like this was approached from a layout perspective rather than a typographic one.
For a site like ALA, I find the design to be really, really disappointing.