Be very careful in choosing hebrew and greek fonts...
Posted: 2005-09-19 15:17:23
I'm about to purchase Nisus Express 2.5, having been very impressed with the demo. They're apparently working on the OpenType font issues which currently prevent full compatibility with many OpenType fonts' support for some of the more complicated characters.
And I _almost_ purchased greek and hebrew fonts from Linguist's Software (http://www.linguistsoftware.com/), which sells unicode fonts in both languages.
But it turns out that the $99 USD per font doesn't allow you to print to PDF. To print a PDF, you need to pay an additional "modest fee" (description from the very well hidden caveat on their site) of $200 per font to enable them to be used in PDFs. I've verified this with their president, and while it's fine to charge whatever you want for products, I do think such a limitation needs to be made clear to buyers.
Yikes!
There are lots of alternatives now with a similar feature set. Here's what I'm looking at now:
Society of Biblical Literature has a free unicode Hebrew font with a full set of OpenType glyphs. Works with Mac, Windows, Unix.
http://www.sbl-site.org/Resources/Resou ... Fonts.aspx
The Cardo font is another with the same feature set, and is a very large font that includes both greek and hebrew.
http://www.scholarsfonts.net/cardofnt.html
GreekKeys now has unicode support, and is nicely packaged up with keyboard maps, etc. No PDF restrictions that I can see, and at $40 is a very reasonable price for a popular font.
http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~pinax/gre ... kKeys.html
I'm sure there are others, but these are the ones I've found so far. Does anyone know of others, or have any input on their experiences with these?
Hope this can save others the disapointment of finding fonts they paid for are crippled.
And I _almost_ purchased greek and hebrew fonts from Linguist's Software (http://www.linguistsoftware.com/), which sells unicode fonts in both languages.
But it turns out that the $99 USD per font doesn't allow you to print to PDF. To print a PDF, you need to pay an additional "modest fee" (description from the very well hidden caveat on their site) of $200 per font to enable them to be used in PDFs. I've verified this with their president, and while it's fine to charge whatever you want for products, I do think such a limitation needs to be made clear to buyers.
Yikes!
There are lots of alternatives now with a similar feature set. Here's what I'm looking at now:
Society of Biblical Literature has a free unicode Hebrew font with a full set of OpenType glyphs. Works with Mac, Windows, Unix.
http://www.sbl-site.org/Resources/Resou ... Fonts.aspx
The Cardo font is another with the same feature set, and is a very large font that includes both greek and hebrew.
http://www.scholarsfonts.net/cardofnt.html
GreekKeys now has unicode support, and is nicely packaged up with keyboard maps, etc. No PDF restrictions that I can see, and at $40 is a very reasonable price for a popular font.
http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~pinax/gre ... kKeys.html
I'm sure there are others, but these are the ones I've found so far. Does anyone know of others, or have any input on their experiences with these?
Hope this can save others the disapointment of finding fonts they paid for are crippled.