On 10/06/2015 04:50 AM, Gabriele Ponzo wrote:
I'm not informed on that specifically, but usually forks are made for
license issues, so that may be the "problem".
Try comparing Google and Liberation Fonts licenses if you wish, and if
you'll do please report to us as well.
I'd appreciate, at
Most developers don't read this list as it's designed to be about users
supporting one another. I suggest emailing the ux list as that's where user
experience is discussed by contributors (developers and non-developers).
Best,
Joel
On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 3:42 AM, Gabriele Ponzo
El 06-10-2015 18:21, Joel Madero escribió:
Most developers don't read this list as it's designed to be about
users supporting one another. I suggest emailing the ux list as that's
where user experience is discussed by contributors (developers and
non-developers).
Best,
Joel
Joel, thank you
I'm not informed on that specifically, but usually forks are made for
license issues, so that may be the "problem".
Try comparing Google and Liberation Fonts licenses if you wish, and if
you'll do please report to us as well.
I'd appreciate, at least ;)
---
Gabriele Ponzo
2015-10-05 22:40
El 06-10-2015 05:50, Gabriele Ponzo escribió:
I'm not informed on that specifically, but usually forks are made for
license issues, so that may be the "problem".
Liberation fonts 2.0 (SIL open font license1.1) is a fork of google
croscore fonts, due to the initial license of "liberation
Thank you.
I guess the suggestion should have arrived at destination (devs) as (some
of) they also should read this list as well.
---
Gabriele Ponzo
2015-10-06 11:58 GMT+02:00 Bastián Díaz :
> El 06-10-2015 05:50, Gabriele Ponzo escribió:
>
>> I'm not informed on
Hi, this must be an old topic but I wonder why LibreOffice does not use
the full set of google croscore fonts.
Currently, LibreOffice includes Caladea and Carlito replacing Cambria
and Calibri fonts. However, LibreOffice does not include the fonts
Arimo, Tinos and Cousine (replacing Arial,