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(New page: This is an interesting cool idea indeed. My initial reaction was do we really need it now, given that we install mostly fonts now by default in Fedora anyway? I think I would rather just...)
 
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This is an interesting cool idea indeed.  My initial reaction was do we really need it now, given that we install mostly fonts now by default in Fedora anyway?  I think I would rather just install good coverage by default (as we pretty much do already) than require users to download fonts, but for people who don't want all good font coverage by default or on small machines or trying to read an "obscure" script it probably makes sense.  Do you have any explicit examples in mind that would help many users of current default Fedora installs?  --JensPetersen
This is an interesting cool idea indeed.  My initial reaction was do we really need it now, given that we install mostly fonts now by default in Fedora anyway?  I think I would rather just install good coverage by default (as we pretty much do already) than require users to download fonts, but for people who don't want all good font coverage by default or on small machines or trying to read an "obscure" script it probably makes sense.  Do you have any explicit examples in mind that would help many users of current default Fedora installs?  --[[User:Petersen|Petersen]] 00:16, 20 November 2008 (UTC)

Revision as of 00:16, 20 November 2008

This is an interesting cool idea indeed. My initial reaction was do we really need it now, given that we install mostly fonts now by default in Fedora anyway? I think I would rather just install good coverage by default (as we pretty much do already) than require users to download fonts, but for people who don't want all good font coverage by default or on small machines or trying to read an "obscure" script it probably makes sense. Do you have any explicit examples in mind that would help many users of current default Fedora installs? --Petersen 00:16, 20 November 2008 (UTC)