<p>Hi,</p>
<p>Well yes, all other browsers support normal fonts, so that's a defacto standard. I don't see MS changing though, it must prop up the proprietary software culture quite hard as the weight of free software network effects streamroll it :)</p>
<p>Downloading EOTs makes little sense to me. What use are they outside a browser?</p>
<p>Regards, Dave</p>
<p><blockquote>On 1 Jul 2009, 4:27 PM, "Joshua A.C. Newman" <<a href="mailto:joshua@joshuanewmandesign.com">joshua@joshuanewmandesign.com</a>> wrote:<br><br><div style="word-wrap:break-word"><p><font color="#500050">> Well, IE did this in like 1996 so its not really true they decided to do something different;
</font></p><div>Yeah, I remember that this is an old thing. But now there <i>is</i> a standard.<div><br></div><div>But:</div><p><font color="#500050">
> 2009/7/1 ricardo lafuente <<a href="mailto:bollecs@sollec.org">bollecs@sollec.org</a>>:
>>
>> would it be too difficult/impractical to h...</font></p><div>That's the hot hotness. But doesn't that only work for linking to those fonts? Would it work to generate EOTs for download as well?</div><div>
<br></div><font color="#888888"><div>-J</div><div><br></div></font><div><p><font color="#500050">On Jul 1, 2009, at 11:13 AM, Dave Crossland wrote:
> 2009/7/1 Joshua A.C. Newman <joshua@joshuanewm...</font></p><p><font color="#500050">Joshua Newman Design
401.225.7222
</font></p></div></div></div></blockquote></p>