“This will make text and other items smaller on your display,” a warning whispered. “You may need to sign out.”
Then he saw it. A button in the bottom-right corner. Not a slider. Not a drop-down. A button labeled . how to make the icons on my desktop smaller
Martin didn’t care about the consequences. He clicked 100% . “This will make text and other items smaller
The screen blinked. The taskbar thinned. The title bar of his open folder shrank to a respectable size. And the desktop icons? They became… normal. Standard. Acceptable. But not small . Not elegantly tiny . Not a slider
He held and very slowly spun the wheel downward. One click. Two clicks. Three clicks.
He picked up the cold Earl Grey, drank it anyway, and whispered to the empty room: “Smaller. Always smaller.”
They didn’t jump. They didn’t snap. They glided . Each tiny rotation of the wheel reduced their size by a few pixels. Five clicks. Ten clicks. The Recycle Bin was now the size of a thimble. The Chrome globe was a marble. The text labels were crisp, miniature lines of type.