It's difficult to read posts because they all look like print outs from an old typewriter. It's not my browser or PC settings because other sites I visit look fine. Any fix in settings for this? Thanks
Here's what your post looks like on my screen ...
So, not fuzzy here.
The text shows as font-family: "Source Sans Pro","Helvetica",Arial,sans-serif; font-weight: 400;"
Your browser should display any one of those fonts. I don't have Source Sans Pro, so it is probably using Helvetica.
I do find something weird if I hover over Source Sans Pro in the debugger:
That is clearly not a Sans font and perhaps it is what you are seeing?
'Source Sans Pro' is being downloaded via an @font-face call in the stylesheet, so everyone should be seeing it unless the font doesn't download for some reason. It is what I see when I look via Firebug in Firefox. Were you actually hovering over the font name, Harry. The cursor is shown immediately after 'font-family:' in your screen grab.
Some browsers use a different rendering engine when displaying downloaded fonts compared with system fonts. This could lead to differences in anti-aliasing between different fonts from different websites.
If the problem is in Chrome on Win 7 the problem could be whether the browser is seeing the SVG or WOFF version of the font. See here for a fuller explanation: http://www.fontspring.com/blog/smoother-web-font-rendering-chrome http://www.fontspring.com/demos/svg-vs-woff/ It could also be a browser setting that changes between GDI and DirectWrite font rendering. Chrome switched from GDI to DirectWrite as the default with the update to v37, which I think happened in August this year. Lots of people reported the different font-smooting/anti-aliasing as the text becoming 'blurry'. This effect seems to work differently on system fonts to some fonts served directly from the website to fonts served via Googlefonts.
Edit: I just checked the stylesheets and it doesn't look like you're using SVG versions of the fonts (only WOFF and EOT) so the first point is probably not relevant here.