Web Open Font Format Moves Ahead

Nov 2, 2009

From Ars Technica:

Efforts to bring advanced typography to the Web have reached an important milestone. Type designers Tal Leming and Erik van Blokland, who had been working to developing the .webfont format, combined forces with Mozilla’s Jonathan Kew, who had been working independently on a similar format. The result of the collaboration is called Web Open Font Format (WOFF), and it has the backing of a wide array of type designers and type foundries. Mozilla will also include support for it in Firefox 3.6.

WOFF combines the work of Leming and Blokland had done on embedding a variety of useful font metadata with the font resource compression that Kew had developed. The end result is a format that includes optimized compression that reduces the download time needed to load font resources while incorporating information about the font’s origin and licensing. The format doesn’t include any encryption or DRM, so it should be universally accepted by browser vendors—this should also qualify it for adoption by the W3C.

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3 comments on this article...

  1. Nov 2, 2009 socialmediajs says:

    Web Open Font Format Moves Ahead http://bit.ly/Cilcp #news #socialmedia

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  2. Nov 2, 2009 HawaiianKiko says:

    RT @sfsmjobshoot: Web Open Font Format Moves Ahead http://bit.ly/2AH1ZX #news #socialmedia

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

  3. Nov 2, 2009 AggieGreiter says:

    Web Open Font Format Moves Ahead http://bit.ly/2fE914

    This comment was originally posted on Twitter

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Emily Chang

This is the personal site of Emily Chang, designer and co-founder of Ideacodes, specializing in web, UI, UX, IxD. Also an entrepreneur, webling, geek, blogger, surfer. Likes robots. More...

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