> Alan Wood wrote: > I couldn't agree more. And I wonder how many people want to be > able to read Web pages in a particular language but don't also > want to write e-mails and word processor documents in that > language. Web fonts are not a lot of use when you want to > produce documents.
No, I don't agree. I don't care if a particular user is able to show Hawaiian in general or not. It may be a problem worth discussing, but not one that I am interested in. I'm talking about the concerns of someone running a web site. I don't care if an OS does Unicode or not, as long as I can produce Unicode web pages that browsers can show. Why should a browser be limited by the shortcomings of the platform it runs on? Unicode and HMTL4 are standards that has been around for some time. I wish browsers would fully support them, regardless of used OS. (Argh.... this is just too frustrating. I'll jump infront of a car if someone else suggest that I should just install a god damn font. ;-) Regards, - Michael

