** Summary changed:

- update ttf-freefont to new upstream version 20081226 
+ update ttf-freefont to new upstream version 20090104

** Description changed:

  Binary package hint: ttf-freefont
  
  GNU ttf-freefont released a new package.
  
- From https://savannah.gnu.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=5588
+ From https://savannah.gnu.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=5601
+ 
+ There are three main changes.
+ 
+ 1) The Glagolitic range has been removed, due to an unfortunate mistake (mea 
culpa!) regarding licensing of the font on which the range is based.
+ Efforts to contact the original author were made but no reply was actually 
received. We are trying again, but until proper permission is given, these 
glyphs will remain excluded.
+ 
+ 2) The old bug regarding excessive line spacing in Mono was
+ inadvertently re-introduced in the last release. It has been fixed
+ again, and the test scripts now contain tests for the problem.
+ 
+ 3) Daniel Johnson has provided a bold version of his Cherokee range.
+ Oblique faces have also been filled in.
+ 
+ Also, the license has been upgraded to GPL v3
+ 
+ Thanks!
  
  Big technical improvement
  =========================
  
      * FreeFont is now kerned!
  
  Ranges added
  ============
  
      * Cherokee [donated by Daniel Johnson]
  
  [These by George Douros]
  
      * Gothic
      * Phoenician
      * Byzantine Musical Symbols
      * Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols (partly--see below)
      * Mah Jong Tiles
      * Dominoes (partly)
  
      * Glagolitic [by Darko Žubrinić]
  
      * Coptic [donated by Steve White]
  
  Ranges adjusted
  ===============
  
      * Malayalam (Replaced with updated Rachana_04 font)
      * Cyrillic (Extended-B, Cyrillic Supplement)
      * Vietnamese (Added mark lookups)
      * Thai (Filled out bold, italic styles, improved mark lookups, kerned)
      * Greek (Re-designed Upsilon, much fiddling with accents)
      * Hebrew (Added pointed letters)
      * Armenian (Added ligatures)
      * Hanunóo (Added mark lookups)
  
  Ranges filled out
  =================
  Latin Extended Additional
  Miscellaneous Symbols
  Combining Diacritical Marks
  Currency Symbols
  Spacing Modifier Letters
  Superscripts and Subscripts
  International Phonetic Alphabet
  Phonetic Extensions
  General Punctuation
  Letterlike Symbols
  Enclosed Alphanumerics
  added APL characters (but why?)
  
  Mathematical Alphanumeric Symbols
  =================================
  The suitability of this whole range is of arguable,
  On the other hand it is in the standard, and other characters in Unicode 
(e.g. in Letterlike Symbols) refer to it, and I'm personally pushing for 
completion of math ranges. And George Douros has collected the glyphs, so in 
they go.
  
  I replaced most of George's glyphs with copies of those in
  other ranges of FreeFont, and some with Young Ryu's TXFonts.
  His calligraphic, script and blackboard bold,
  and his character naming scheme, remain.
  
  More languages supported
  ========================
  I find Daniel's Cherokee to be the best I've seen, and I've
  downloaded most of the freely-available ones.
  
  The extensions to Cyrillic should provide support for many
  living languages, including:
  
  Russian, Ukrainian, Macedonian, Serbian, Belarusian, Rusyn, Bulgarian,
  Altay, Abkhasian, Azerbaijani, Bashkir, Chuvash, Kazakh, Tatar, Uzbek,
  Yakut, Tajik, Kildin Sami, Mari, Khanty, Nenets, Mordvin, Komi, Enets,
  Moldavian, Chukchi, Itelmen, Aleut, Yupik
  
  There is a movement on to revive Coptic, so we'll call it live.
  
  I think the Thai range wasn't really functional before the mark lookups
  were added. It has now been declared quite good by a native reader.
  
  Kerning
  =======
  Finally realized why kerning didn't work in Linux, and wasn't
  recognized in Windows. Fixed.
  
  But I never liked the kerning tables that came with Nimbus.
  I think they were automatically generated, but often didn't
  make sense technically (a kern of 1EM out of 1000 is invisible)
  or visually (many letters under-kerned, many badly over-kerned).
  
  So I made my own kerning tables for Latin and basic Cyrillic.
  
  It is likely that I made mistakes, or that I've generally over-done it.
  (As always, comments are welcome!)
  
  The kerning in Latin is elaborate--maybe too elaborate.
  It was done with consideration at three different levels:
  
  * repairs: letters so widely spaced that words appear broken
  * evenness: even-looking white space between letters
  * flow: letter spacing in printed text somehow flows in bulk.
  This is rather more subtle than what some automatic area-averaging might
  give (and harder to explain). Basically, I printed out a bunch of text
  in various languages, and eyeballed it--a lot.
  
  Latin tables were intended to provide kerning for all European languages,
  and Turkish. Besides English, I printed out pages of text in
  French, Spanish, and German
  and specifically kerned for pairs in these languages.
  I didn't do Vietnamese yet.
  
  The policy for kerning in Cyrillic went the other way:
  I resolved only to fix problems here. The base font was already pretty
  tight--any further condensation would degrade readability.
  
  Other technical repairs
  =======================
  Misplaced or mis-numbered glyphs in
  Tamil, Gujarati, Devanagari, Hebrew Presentation Forms, Latin Extended B.
  
  Many glyphs in Private Use area that incorrectly had Unicode numbers.
  
  Lookup issues in Gurmukhi.
  
  Various spline issues in Tamil.
  
  ProblemType: Bug
  Architecture: i386
  DistroRelease: Ubuntu 8.10
  Package: ttf-freefont 20080323-3
  PackageArchitecture: all
  ProcEnviron:
   SHELL=/bin/bash
   PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games
   LANG=en_IN
  SourcePackage: ttf-freefont
  Uname: Linux 2.6.27-9-generic i686

-- 
update ttf-freefont to new upstream version 20090104 
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/311664
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