The world definitely needs more web fonts, but supplying them in small packages by Microsoft (or anyone else for that matter) every ten years is not much of a way to go. The future of web fonts could much more likely lie in technologies like CSS (similar technologies have been supported by some browsers for a long time now, but without proper standardization can never reach the required level of adoption by majority of browsers and users).
Could you be a little more specific? From what I've heard, IBM (Lenovo ThinkPad) laptops are one of the most reliable around.
Don't worry, it's a bluff.
Unless there are half naked girls in your department, I don't really see a choice here.
The world definitely needs more web fonts, but supplying them in small packages by Microsoft (or anyone else for that matter) every ten years is not much of a way to go. The future of web fonts could much more likely lie in technologies like CSS (similar technologies have been supported by some browsers for a long time now, but without proper standardization can never reach the required level of adoption by majority of browsers and users).
Sounds good. Where did you hear that?
(10 cm)^2. Sorry, I don't know why the ^2 sign didn't show up in my previous comment.
He meant (10 cm).
I stopped using them when they stopped being free. Back when they gave $0.2 worth of free downloads to every new user, I had like 100 accounts there.
Oh, that happened to me quite a few times. The Big Ten have my full understanding.