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Lohit is a font family designed to cover Indic scripts and released by Red Hat. The Lohit fonts currently cover 11 languages: Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi, Tamil, Telugu. [1] The fonts were supplied by Modular Infotech and licensed under the GPL.
Free Bangla fonts and keyboard available from ekushey.org; Free Malayalam fonts and keyboards available here; Free Khmer font available from Danh Hong's blog or by downloading any Khmer font from Google Fonts; Free Burmese font: Martin Hosken's Padauk; Note: Additional fonts for these scripts have to be in /Library/Fonts in order for text to be ...
Swathanthra Malayalam Computing (SMC) is a free software community and non profit charitable society working on Malayalam and other Indic languages. [1] [2] It is the biggest language computing developer community in India. [3] This group has been involved in the Malayalam translation of GNOME, [4] KDE, [5] and Mozilla projects [6] like Firefox ...
Nirmala UI ("User Interface") is an Indic scripts typeface created by Tiro Typeworks and commissioned by Microsoft.It was first released with Windows 8 in 2012 as a UI font and currently supports languages using Bengali–Assamese, Devanagari, Kannada, Gujarati, Gurmukhi, Malayalam, Meitei, Odia, Ol Chiki, Sinhala, Sora Sompeng, Tamil and Telugu.
SMC is the upstream maintainers for Malayalam fonts and tools [27] for popular GNU/Linux based operating systems such as Fedora and Debian. They also maintain localizations for Free Software Desktops ( GNOME / KDE ) and applications such as Firefox [ 28 ] and Libre Office .
In the early days of the Malayalam computing, he came into the field of Malayalam computing by creating his own Malayalam font and text editor. Hussain's major contributions include eleven fonts including Rachana, Meera, Keraliyam, Tamil Inime, Dyuthi, Uroob and Panmana, the preservation of millions of pages in five digital archives, and the ...
Malayalam is a Unicode block containing characters of the Malayalam script. In its original incarnation, the code points U+0D02..U+0D4D were a direct copy of the Malayalam characters A2-ED from the 1988 ISCII standard.
The Noto family is designed with the goal of achieving visual harmony (e.g., compatible heights and stroke thicknesses) across multiple languages/scripts. Commissioned by Google, the font is licensed under the SIL Open Font License. [3] Until September 2015, the fonts were under the Apache License 2.0. [4]