Read Regular
A European designer, Natascha French, has designed a new typeface called Read Regular to make text easier to read for dyslexic people.
It looks like a pretty normal sans-serif typeface at first glance, but the background page provides information on what's different about it. For example, each letter has a unique shape; b and d are not exact mirror images of each other. The regularity of shapes that's usually a characteristic of a good typeface is, I assume, a disadvantage when a reader might easily confuse exact mirror images, so the designer's added slight variations to each letter.
Pretty cool. Dyslexic people can presumably acquire the typeface (though I'm not quite sure how to do that) and use it on their computers, for reading web pages and such—though as a page on dyslexia at that site reminds me, big blocks of text may still be a problem.