Technorama

An omnibus of tech posts by a Futurologist on software development primarily.

Tuesday, 12 December 2006

 

Rich Web Typography - Just around the corner?

It's 2006 and it still feels like we're in 1995 as far as fonts on the WWW go. Time has moved on, we've stopped calling it the WWW and just say the web now. It's integrated into the fabric of our lives, we don't think about what's happening when we access information, it's just something we rely on.

Fonts on the web haven't kept up with the pace of change, the fonts which can be used in web pages are still limited to what ships with peoples computers! When the tech is in place, I want to see web sites providing fonts just like they provide an image or a vector graphic at present ;)

There are ways we can get custom fonts into pages, but they are either tied to a specific browser or require the user to download and install the TrueType Font themselves as administrator of their PC beforehand. Other approaches use Adobe's Flash as the means of rendering Anti-Aliased fonts in a browser, sIFR 2.0 is one framework which takes this approach; it does gracefully display using standard XHTML if the Flash plug-in is not installed, so users should not see any Flash errors at least.

Another key point is that users and companies need fonts they are allowed to distribute, home users might not be able to afford to buy special fonts. This means home users will either have to make their own (a time consuming affair, even more so for Asian languages!), or just put up with the bog standard Helvetica and Times fonts which most Linux, Mac and Windows installs come with (you need to maintain the common denominator between systems right! ;) One popular community produced free font is Gentium, I've also been using DejaVu Sans, check them out!

There is already a way to pull in our fonts, take this CSS example I wrote from the W3C's CSS2 spec, (dropped this from the CSS2.1 spec though!):

/* Define Maxus font to be downloaded if needed */
@font-face
{
font-family: "Maxus"; src: url("maxus.ttf") format(TrueType)
}


The W3C gurus have been discussing fonts too. Here's what I can see needs to be prioritised to get this in place:
As a side note, these developments could create a whole market for fonts to be licensed for use on a website, or given away free under a non-commercial licence to home users etc.

So to summarise, let's focus on the open CSS2 specification we have. Plan of action: Web authoring tools vendors like Adobe need to support it, the W3C to promote it and web browsers to implement the support! ... possible? Yes. Will it ever happen? If no better solution comes along first, I hope it will!

Digg!

Labels: , ,


Comments:
Installing fonts on a windows PC has historically be a major pain in the neck(limited number of fonts, having to 'install them etc). IE 7's anti-aliasing is nice, but I'd like to see more fonts out there for free, or have a database of free fonts located on a web-server or as a freely available archive. Or even how about a program that can be set to auto-update the web's most frequently requested fonts every time u visit the web?, or set that your browser can automatically locate it from a specific fonts directory without bugging the user for permission.
 
Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]





<< Home

Archives

February 2003   March 2003   April 2003   August 2004   September 2004   December 2004   May 2005   June 2005   December 2006   January 2007   February 2007   March 2007   April 2007   July 2007   August 2007   September 2007   October 2007   November 2007   December 2007   January 2008   February 2008   March 2008   April 2008   May 2008   June 2008   July 2008   August 2008   September 2008   October 2008   November 2008   December 2008   January 2009   February 2009   March 2009   April 2009   September 2009   November 2009   December 2009   January 2010   April 2010   September 2010   October 2010   November 2010   December 2010   January 2011   February 2011   March 2011   April 2011   May 2011   June 2011   July 2011   August 2011   September 2011   October 2011   November 2011   December 2011   January 2012   February 2012   March 2012   April 2012   May 2012   June 2012   July 2012   October 2012   December 2012   March 2013   May 2013   August 2013   September 2013   October 2013   November 2013   March 2014   May 2014   June 2014   July 2014   September 2014   October 2014   December 2014   January 2015   February 2015   March 2015   April 2015   May 2015   June 2015   July 2015   August 2015   September 2015   October 2015   November 2015   December 2015   March 2016   April 2016   May 2016   July 2016   August 2016   September 2016   October 2016   November 2016   December 2016   January 2017   February 2017   March 2017   April 2017   May 2017   June 2017   July 2017   August 2017   September 2017   November 2017   March 2018   April 2018   May 2018   June 2018   August 2018   October 2018   December 2018   January 2019   March 2019   May 2019   August 2019   September 2019   March 2020   April 2020   May 2020   September 2020   October 2020   February 2022   June 2022   July 2022   October 2022   December 2022   February 2023   April 2023   September 2023   October 2023   May 2024   June 2024   July 2024  

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Subscribe to Posts [Atom]