S
Stephan Rose
On Mon, 04 Feb 2008 21:18:40 -0500, Moshe Goldfarb wrote:
> http://ubuntusite.com/not-satisfied-with-firefox-try-opera-for-ubuntu/
>
> So what is it about Fonts that Linux just can't seem to get right? How
> long has Linux been around and still it can't manage to look decent?
Read up on how truetype works and you'll know what they just "can't seem
to get right". The problem is not that nobody can't get it right, getting
it right is the easy part. The problem is a legal issue.
Here is a rough description of the problem:
The problem is that Truetype uses special glyph program (part of each
font) for the hinting process. Many of these instructions in that program
can be used without an issue.
SOME of these instructions however are patented and *cannot legally* be
used by someone without a license to those patents. Linux for instance
does not have such a license.
Unfortunately, it's these patented instructions that matter the most.
Here is some more detail on the issue:
http://freetype.sourceforge.net/patents.html
Now the latest version of the freetype font rendering library does come
with it's own auto-hinting mechanism to circumvent the patent issue which
does seem to do an excellent job.
Ubuntu 6.04 fonts were decent but could use improvement.
Ubuntu 7.10 I honestly can't complain about quality, and that includes
Japanese fonts. I'm looking at my text here right now on a 1980x1200 LCD
and the font is perfectly clear and sharp.
--
Stephan
1986 Pontiac Fiero GT
å›ã®äº‹æ€ã„出ã™æ—¥ãªã‚“ã¦ãªã„ã®ã¯
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> http://ubuntusite.com/not-satisfied-with-firefox-try-opera-for-ubuntu/
>
> So what is it about Fonts that Linux just can't seem to get right? How
> long has Linux been around and still it can't manage to look decent?
Read up on how truetype works and you'll know what they just "can't seem
to get right". The problem is not that nobody can't get it right, getting
it right is the easy part. The problem is a legal issue.
Here is a rough description of the problem:
The problem is that Truetype uses special glyph program (part of each
font) for the hinting process. Many of these instructions in that program
can be used without an issue.
SOME of these instructions however are patented and *cannot legally* be
used by someone without a license to those patents. Linux for instance
does not have such a license.
Unfortunately, it's these patented instructions that matter the most.
Here is some more detail on the issue:
http://freetype.sourceforge.net/patents.html
Now the latest version of the freetype font rendering library does come
with it's own auto-hinting mechanism to circumvent the patent issue which
does seem to do an excellent job.
Ubuntu 6.04 fonts were decent but could use improvement.
Ubuntu 7.10 I honestly can't complain about quality, and that includes
Japanese fonts. I'm looking at my text here right now on a 1980x1200 LCD
and the font is perfectly clear and sharp.
--
Stephan
1986 Pontiac Fiero GT
å›ã®äº‹æ€ã„出ã™æ—¥ãªã‚“ã¦ãªã„ã®ã¯
å›ã®äº‹å¿˜ã‚ŒãŸã¨ããŒãªã„ã‹ã‚‰