Mac Users' Internet Experience to Retain Same Fonts 282
thefickler sent in this article that opens, "Mac users will continue to see the Internet as it was intended, thanks to the renewal of a font licensing agreement between Microsoft and Apple. At TypeCon2007 Microsoft and Apple announced they have renewed their font licensing agreement, giving Apple users ongoing use of the latest versions of Microsoft Windows core fonts. Back in 1996 Microsoft started the "Core fonts for the Web" initiative. The idea of this initiative was to create a a standard pack of fonts that would be present on all or most computers, allowing web pages to be displayed consistently on different computers. While the project was terminated in 2002, some of the fonts defined as core fonts for the web have gone on to become known as "web safe fonts," and are therefore widely used by Internet developers."
It works! (Score:2, Funny)
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Why was the project terminated? (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems to me, if you give something out, then its out, and not yours to later revoke.
btw, the submission is verbatim cut from the source article, nice job 'editting'.
Nice job "spelling" (Score:4, Insightful)
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This type of behaviour should be remembered when thinking about ODF/OOXML. Seems to me that the words "Microsoft", and "standards" just don't go together, and that if you care, even remotely, about a level-software-playing-field you should be avoiding their products.
What're the MS fanboys' take on this?
Some other terms incompatible with "Microsoft" (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why was the project terminated? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why was the project terminated? (Score:4, Interesting)
Liberation fonts... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Liberation fonts... (Score:5, Informative)
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I'll have some liberation toast with my freedom fries. Thanks.
Re:Why was the BS perpetuated? (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless you mean the problem to lock-in. In which case...
While we are well aware it's not public domain, the argument here is that it should be. Damn, do we need to be as explicit as lawyers here?From what I can tell (not that I've looked into this at all), MS said that these fonts would be safe to use on the web because everyone would have them. In other words, it would be a standard. In that sense, they are definitely to blame for revoking it (or, as you would like to put it, defining-it-as-a-standard-and-then-charging-for-th e-use-of).
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
You aren't a designer (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, I am a pedant. I pay close attention to fonts. I notice when a single character has been substituted because the specified font didn't have a glyph for a particular codepoint. But I don't care too much for this license, either. I hate Arial with a passion, and wish my Mac would substitute Helvetica, since Arial was actually designed as a Helvetica clone that cost less to license. Verdana was designed to be legible on low-resolution displays. Displays have higher resolutions now, and font rendering technologies have improved. Verdana has outlived its usefulness. Courier New is just plain ugly. I want my fixed-pitch text rendered in Monaco.
So all in all, I don't see how the extension of this license is a good thing for anyone.
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Actually, Monotype originally developed Ariel for IBM [stepinsidedesign.com] in the early 80s, except at the time it was known as Sonoran Sans. Sonoran Sans was then repackaged as Ariel for Microsoft in the early 90s.
Re:You aren't a designer (Score:4, Interesting)
Hey, I like Verdana (aside from the fact that it renders larger at a given point size than other fonts). Just because it may have been designed for some particular purpose doesn't mean it isn't pretty!
Re:You aren't a designer (Score:5, Informative)
The point size of a font is measured from the top of the highest ascender (think l's, b's, and d's) to the bottom of the lowest descender (p's, q's, and y's). A typeface can be specified to be 14 points, but if it has a small x-height with ridiculously long ascenders and descenders, it will appear tiny. Verdana happens to have a large x-height, so at the same point size it appears larger than other typefaces that have a more "normal" x-height.
Re:What's the point (size)? (Score:4, Informative)
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That reminds me of this message [stanford.edu] on Donald Knuth's webpage. As much as I appreciate both the fonts and the typesetting provided by TeX, I doubt I would ever notice the difference between the deltas.
You aren't a small handheld device. (Score:4, Interesting)
Let me introduce you to this new fangled device known as...a smart phone.
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Re:You aren't a designer (Score:5, Informative)
Good news! You can have the Web this way right now. (At least, you can if you're using Firefox; Safari probably has a similar feature, but I don't use it so I can't guarantee that.)
Now the Web will be rendered in exactly the fonts you specified, and you never have to be offended by the sight of Arial again :-)
Re:You aren't a designer (Score:4, Informative)
1. Go to Safari's preferences window
2. Choose "Appearance" pane
3. Choose the fonts you want substituted for the "Standard Font" and the "Fixed-Width Font". In your case, Helvetica for Standard and Monaco for Fixed-width
4. Close the preferences window
Note that the default font in the "Standard Font" is Times (not TNR!), which is not sans serif. There's no option to choose a sans serif font separately. Presumably, Safari uses the system font (Gill Sans, IIRC) as its sans serif font. Though as I type this, the text in
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You can set the font you wish used as the default for sans type, serif type, etc. in the preferences of Firefox and forbid websites from displaying other fonts. Better yet, get the Stylish [userstyles.org] extension so you can further customize your websites' styles (website specific options).
I like setting all left aligned text to left-right justify, for instance, but you
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IAANAD (I am also not a designer), in fact, I'm a developer, so designers are both my life's blood and my mortal enemies (oh, what tragedy!).
Is it possible to explain what is so offensive about arial other than it being common and Microsoftish? I can spot the difference, and I like helvetica, but it's just honestly not that big of a deal for me.
This strikes me as one of those "menus belong on the top-left of the screen!" type of arguments, where the person making the argument claims that it's an objecti
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Arial and Helvetica (was Re:You aren't a designer) (Score:3, Interesting)
Agreed
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On the other hand, I am a pedant. I pay close attention to fonts. I notice when a single character has been substituted because the specified font didn't have a glyph for a particular codepoint. I hate Arial with a passion, and wish my Mac would substitute Helvetica, since Arial was actually designed as a Helvetica clone that cost less to license. Verdana was designed to be legible on low-resolution displays. Courier New is just plain ugly. I want my fixed-pitch text rendered in Monaco.
Wow, you could get a job writing a column about fonts [theonion.com] for a newspaper or something.
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Really? Which ones? When I look around, I don't see displays pushing past 100PPI much for the desktop. The most common LCDs are between about 85PPI (things like 19" 4:3s) and 100PPI (things like 20" widescreens). I just can't find any normal desktop displays, even high end graphics ones, that push past that. Only in the laptop arena do I see higher PPI and even then it caps out around 130PPI (17" 1920x1200 widescreens). Compared to print at least this is extremely low P
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So download a Monaco TTF, and override it in your browser preferences as the default monospace/np/fixed font.
You have it right that this "act of goodwill" on MS's part means nothing to most people - But for the wrong reason... If the music industry thinks it has a problem with getting people to recognize its copyrights, I pity the font industry. At least most people "know" copying music counts as wrong on some level. Copying fonts, no one even thinks twic
Eww, I wish that license would expire (Score:5, Insightful)
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That's only when I want a specific view (but don't want it falling back to the Times family if not specified). Otherwise I'd just say Helv and let it go at that.
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Of course, the other thing to consider is that web designs -- for good or for bad -- use the typeface as an integral part of the design. Just because you like Rotis Sans instead of Arial does
Re:Eww, I wish that license would expire (Score:5, Informative)
A bit of history on why Arial is so awful (in short). It's a font called Grotesque built to the proportions of Helvetica (so that it can be substituted for Helvetica without changing the page length.) As a result it has terrible eveness and is generally avoided by designers not out of design-snobbery, but due to how Arial negatively affects "grey area".
Microsoft have a history of fucking with typefaces to avoid paying licensing fees. Repeating this act recently with a their new vista font "Segoe" which is almost a carbon-copy of Frutiger. It's subtle differences can only be seen when enlarging the type beyond the 16pt standard test for font similarity. (A test which Segoe failed against Frutiger, flunking it's attempt at registration with the EU trademark office.) Also in Vista the use of Segoe is at 8, 9 and 10 point, figures significantly smaller than the generous 16pt test EU test.
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It's a font called Grotesque
Grotesques are an entire class of fonts. It's not a single font. Perhaps you're thinking of Akzidenz Grotesk.
Monotype Grotesque (Score:4, Informative)
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I won't disagree on Arial or TNR, but Verdana is a very well-designed font for use on low-res screen displays with sub-pixel rendering. But that's not how most people use it, they think it is just another "kinda Helvetica" that happens to be wider than Arial. In fact, all of the original design web fonts MS released were very well-made and well-designed, but are just very rarely well-used.
The world would not be much poorer had this licensing agreem
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If a bank's website - any website, really - is dependant on the presense of certain fonts or the use of certain font sizes in order to be useful, the designer needs to be take out and severely beaten.
Re:Eww, I wish that license would expire (Score:5, Funny)
I Agree! But, I think that when you say "severely," that word needs to be in 24 point bold italic print in order to get the point across more precisely.
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a wild guess (Score:5, Funny)
I'm guessing the "Goatse Wingding super font pack" is not on that list.
Re:a wild guess (Score:5, Funny)
Today's episode of Slashdot has been brought to you by the letter O.
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Every keystroke is a colon. Except the semicolon, and that's bad enough.
One of Apple's worst decisions (Score:5, Funny)
1. Arial - Crap
2. Times New Roman - Crap
3. Comic Sans - Quite possibly the font of the antichrist
4. Courier New - Crap and Apple has access to Courier (the good one) anyway
5. Georgia - Decent but could be replaced with Garamond in any situation for better results
6. Impact - Futura with a missing chromosome
7. Trebuchet - I was mistaken, THIS is the font of the antichrist
8. Verdana - Doesn't Apple own their own variant of Myriad? What the hell do they need this for?
9. Andale Mono - Could be worse, but why care when you have the rights to use Monaco?
10. Webdings - wow, just wow
I sincerely hope Apple didn't spend a lot of money on this crap.
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There are some beautiful typefaces out there, and Microsoft has more or less veritably shat upon the world of typography by imposing Arial and Times New Roman on the world for over a decade.
As a concession, some of the new office 2007 fonts are quite nice [poynter.org], and Consolas [wiredprairie.us] is probably one of the best fixed-width fonts out there.
Apple's built-in font collection is quite a bit better, and their font-rendering system is vastly superior to just about anything else out there.
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See the difference (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally, I've never really been able to tell the difference between one font or another
Re:See the difference (Score:5, Informative)
Personally, I've never really been able to tell the difference between one font or another
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Move out of the United States (Score:3, Insightful)
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I used to do all that with every linux distribution I installed for my own use. This last time, I installed Ubuntu Feisty, and found that I didn't have to touch FreeType.
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The windows ones look the best to me.
They look like shit to me, but you are free to pay for them. Until recently, the rest of us didn't have a choice when we buy a computer from most major vendors.
My wife did not like them either. She almost picked the Apple Safari fonts once but then consistently chose konqueror/debian. This may be due to aliasing from the screen shot, but he's used png so that's probably not an issue.
Kudos to QuantumG for putting the page up.
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ClearType's "rainbows" are an optimization meant specifically for LCD monitors, to gain a bit of extra sharpness. It doesn't work on CRTs; you see the colors but you don't gain the sharpness.
Windows has had "standard" anti-aliasing (using only shades of grey, no "rainbows") since Windows 95, much longer than ClearType has been around. However, for some reason, the "standard" AA only kicks in at larger sizes; typical sizes (12pt, etc.) are left with the jaggies. That's why many people think the only opt
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That's handy, but note that the Windows ones look very different from a standard XP/Vista display, as font smoothing isn't turned on (whether ClearType or not). (I'm not complaining, mind you -- my browser under Windows is non-standard anyway: I've set the default font to Lucida Grande, copied over from my Mac.)
Anyway, I agree with the guy who said that the whole point of HTML was to separate content from presentation. Oh well.
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Though you may not be blind, you really should have stopped sooner.
Whatever happened to content vs presentation? (Score:5, Insightful)
Specific fonts (or, correctly, "typefaces" - a given font is a particular incarnation of a typeface, including size, so Comic Sans 10pt is a different font to Comic Sans 12pt) shouldn't be necessary - families of typefaces maybe, if you're trying to achieve a particular style, but not fonts or even necessarily typefaces.
Trying to nail presentation of a presentation language down to specific fonts or typefaces is about as sensible as demanding your viewer's browser window be 800x600. If you absolutely can't live without your web-based masterpiece being presented in point-perfect font specifivity, present it as a
Re:Whatever happened to content vs presentation? (Score:5, Funny)
I spent a few years working with desktop publishing gurus turned web developers, and I heard this goddamn typeface/font distinction made all the time.
It drove me nuts, but, in the end, one of us was correct about the use of a common technical definition, and the other had sex with women.
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OTOH if you would like to see and experience the website the way the designer intended, thereby seeing the content within the context of a presentation... then allow it to happen. It's still your choice,
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<skeptical>Oh really?</skeptical>
<seriously>Markup and semantics, combined with the content itself, is more than sufficiently nuanced to communicate mood. If they aren't, you're not a very good writer, or you're designing for a really stupid audience.</seriously>
<sarcastic>But I suppose your mood and atmosphere are so much better if
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That ship has sailed. The only place that distinction really matters is where style designers like to talk their jargon. Unfortunately, languages change and it's not likely that profession
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At least with
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We in the real world differentiate abstract goals from actual results, and stress on having results.
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No, they are not. (Score:2)
The idea being, you design your content in HTML, then you use CSS to specify some presentation. Not all of it, you leave some up to the browser, but some, allowing you to tweak things for print vs web vs handheld.
But if you're wanting to design something intended to be printed, HTML is probably not the best thing to use, and certainly not the easiest.
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SanityInAnarchy wrote:
I agree. With so many variables out there, using only HTML it'
Embrace extend extinguish (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Embrace extend extinguish (Score:5, Funny)
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Very funny you guys (Score:4, Informative)
What's Wrong With Apple's Font Rendering? [codinghorror.com]
Welcome to the blurry, but fast, browser... [scobleizer.com]
Apple and Microsoft have always disagreed in how to display fonts on computer displays... [joelonsoftware.com]
Re:Very funny you guys (Score:4, Informative)
Font Rendering: Respecting The Pixel Grid
I've finally determined What's Wrong With Apple's Font Rendering. As it turns out, there actually wasn't anything wrong with Apple's font rendering, per se. Apple simply chose a different font rendering philosophy, as Joel Spolsky explains:... (link to article [codinghorror.com])
Rather good and concise explanation of the different strategies of font-rendering.
"The Internet as it was intended." (Score:2)
RAWR! (Score:2, Insightful)
WE NEED MORE OPEN SOURCE FONTS!
Microsoft is stifling competition in the font war by forcing internet font lock in! Linux users, and the tech-proletariat in general, demand an end to this typeface travesty!
Will the Linux sellouts be next? (Score:2)
I must say that there is an effort in the KDE development circles to make the KDE desktop and internet experience through Konqueror, the best it can be.
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It generally isn't very difficult regardless of distro to get the Microsoft fonts in Linux. The only question is the legality of it.
Patch solutions worst (Score:2)
It is a terrible patch-solution to follow MS' "standard" web developers should seriously know better and I think that apple has seriously screwed up with this one, they should have tried to battle those fonts instead of keeping licensing them. Apple is an strong enough company...
That would not be so horrible, and is available. (Score:2)
I wonder whether the so called Linux sellouts (read Novell, Linspire, Xandros) will be next. After all, fonts on these Linux systems and Linux in general are still very very wanting.
It would be nice for those users who actually want such things to have them, even though I think those fonts suck (parent post has images to compare) [slashdot.org]. You can already get the M$ core fonts from M$ themselves by following crossover office instructions. M$ has the fonts in a series of files on some hideous and obfuscated supp
Re:That would not be so horrible, and is available (Score:2)
You can already get the M$ core fonts from M$ themselves by following crossover office instructions. M$ has the fonts in a series of files on some hideous and obfuscated support website
Or right here on the Sourceforge network in source RPM form [sourceforge.net], but don't let that stop your bitching.
They're under a "distribute all you want however you want as much as you want to whoever you want, but don't change the fonts and claim they're the same or charge for them" license. Hardly as evil as you claim.
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Or right here on the Sourceforge network in source RPM form, but don't let that stop your bitching.
A link to cab extraction utilities and a pile of .exe "form" fonts? How friendly. Must be that cross platform obfuscation M$ likes to talk up.^M
A question to the world: (Score:5, Interesting)
Then if you use a PC for a while, when you come back to a Mac the fonts feel really blury?
Re:A question to the world: (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. This article [joelonsoftware.com] explains exactly why this is the case.
The "too long; didn't read" summary: Microsoft optimizes font display for on-screen readability, whereas Apple optimizes for getting the same results (page coverage or "grayness %") on screen as you would obtain in print.
Re:A question to the world: (Score:4, Insightful)
The first thing you have to know about Microsoft's and Apple's attempts at clearer type is that Windows ClearType breaks each pixel into three sub-pixels sitting side by side, and thus only uses the horizontal axis, whereas Apple softens the sharp lines both horizontally and vertically.
This means that at large sizes, where you might not even be able to discern individual pixels all that well, OSX font smoothing looks great. It smooths things all the way around rather than in just one direction.
Remember, though, that pixels consist (in general) of red, green, and blue side-by-side (left, center, and right). You can't break a pixel into top, center, and bottom sub-pixels unless you rotate your screen 90 degrees..
At small sizes, though, Windows' system assures that the height of characters is a fixed, integral number of pixels. Unlike with OSX, in horizontal lines a line of black pixels will definitely be present. The middles of the letters B and E at an 8-pixel-high font size, for example, will probably have (vertically from the top) black, white, white, black, white, white, white, black. (Forget serifs for now.) The Mac will attempt to "smooth" those lines out even though there's not much space in which to do it (since you can't break a pixel vertically). Thus you get horizontal lines that become halftone grays as the renderer battles bravely to get "smooth" lines without regard for the increased difficulty of vertical smoothing.
Apple doesn't seem to expect people to attempt smooth fonts at sizes below about 9 or 10, if you look at the System Preferences. Windows will smooth them out for you at any size.
I find myself wishing for Windows-style ClearType at small sizes, and on the Mac I end up simply viewing the Web and word processing documents at immense font sizes rather than strain my eyes on the gray blurs. That's fine in these days when 1024x768 has become a small screen resolution, but it is a waste of resolution. I'd rather fit a lot more on that big screen! But I suspect that Apple's system will come out ahead as screen resolutions (both in DPI and in total) increase and we have less and less need to actually see 7-pixel-high text.
JPEGHD, here we come (Score:2)
True Type (Score:2)
Web intended to look like a print mag, not shit (Score:2)
Also these Microsoft fonts are s
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You kids and your fancy newfangled "monitors"! Why, in my day, computer output was on paper! So was the input!
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If you are a individual or an institution based in US, and willing to do a public good, please do seriously consider to sue Apple and explain in the court the public harm caused by above patents and ask the court to advice the US Patent Office to cancel or revoke those patents. (This author reside outside of US)
My understanding is all I have here, but that's NOT grounds for a lawsuit and any such attempt would fail. Terribly. And likely cost YOU (the plaintiff) thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney fees (presuming they can protract court cases with annoying gnats as well as IBM can).