Scalable-Font Tools?
DarkVein writes "My question is twofold. First, with the
introduction of WebFonts
from W3C, are there any projects
underway to develop a real Web Font format, or are Type1 and Truetype
thought to be sufficient? Secondly, I seem to be at a loss to find
any decent and open font creation tools, especially ones capable of
Unicode. The best I've found is
GETO which seems to have
been abandoned about a year and a half ago, without notice. I've
had a long standing desire to get my feet wet designing one or two
decent Unicode fonts, but most of the options seem to only be
available for MacOS9, Win32 and require far higher prices."
It seems that everyone has become satisfied with ripping off M$ True Type fonts. That's why no one seems particularly interested in doing much work in this area. True Types are, arguably, the best looking today and there are thousands if not millions of them.
True Type is from Apple. But, I was referring to the practice of copying the M$ True Type fonts from a Windows machine onto Linux boxes.
Also along the font lines, there's also the Free Font Foundation which has some links to other font editors. Though it says that PfaEdit is "our only hope" so there's probably not anything else all that great to check out ;)
Perhaps some of the links on this page will help?
http://dreamer.nitro.dk/linux/lfp/index.html
Of course I've been wrong before...
Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
That's black letter contract. NOBODY is ripping off Microsoft when they download the fonts from the Microsoft site for personal use. Copying them from a Windows box is a little grey, but as long as it's for personal use it doesn't violate the spirit of the license.
Unfortunately, the license does not include the right to redistribute the fonts. So a Linux distro that included the fonts would probably be in violation of this license, while a distro that provided an installer script would be fine.
For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong. -- H L Mencken
Both NS and MS come out with competing formats for fonts for web pages at one time. Did this die the same horrible death as "Channels". I think MS's format used a program called WEFT to make fonts (web embedded font technology or some such) and was free. Netscape's used some technology developed by bitstream and I seem to remember the creation program being relatively expensive. Both worked quite well (at least on Mac and PC, I was not using linux at the time) What ever happened to this?
I reject your reality
Check out Metafont, which is closely tied to TeX, Knuth's free computer typesetting tool. truetex.com also seems to have a free tool (as in beer) available for a limited time for linux and windows beta testing.
While the technology came from Apple, I think the point is that MS provided very good free TT fonts for the web. Compared to their standard web fonts pack, most anything else is junk. There is no open source equivalent anywhere near the quality of their screen-optimized fonts like Georgia or Verdana.
Chris