A technology invented at the dawn of the desktop-publishing age is about to expire. Developed by Adobe way back in the early 1980s, PostScript Type 1 fonts—a way of encoding vector-based type designs ...
Microsoft has discontinued support for PostScript Type 1 font, a move that marks the end of an era in desktop publishing and potentially brings complications for users of older files. Notably, ...
Regarding the `` PostScript Type 1 font '' that was often used in DTP, it was found that support for the Mac version of Office 365 ended with the update on August 15, 2023. Support for Type1 fonts has ...
Upcoming Windows releases will no longer include support for Adobe Postscript Type 1 fonts. Microsoft is now announcing the end of Type 1 font support. The discontinuation has now appeared on ...
PostScript Type 1 fonts are no longer directly supported. Microsoft was just about the last party still supporting this font. It is now changing that, having already done so for Adobe earlier this ...
President @ SourceForge, the world's largest and most-visited B2B software comparison website (20 million in-market software shoppers per month + Buyer Intent Data) Adobe and Microsoft Break Some Old ...
[ the guardian of order ] In the Age of Digital Chaos The manifest of geometric invariability. By Manuel Eugenio Miranda Peñaloza | Innovation Architect & CEO of IA+Genesis Chile [ the origin old ...
I need to buy a couple fonts for business purposes. I can get them in either Windows PostScript or Windows True Type. Which would I be more likely to get to display properly in Linux? I've heard ...
PostScript Type 1 fonts work fine on OS X. Minion also comes as a MultiMaster, which is not supported under X. I'm not sitting in front of my design box right now, but I'm almost positive Minion ...