![]() I've almost always put the taskbar to the left, vertically on my screen. I'm afraid getting to the Windows icon is problematic for me. I needed to do that for a different reason: I had a bum font, and Xara kept crashing when my cursor came close to the font name on the drop-down list: go figure. The easiest/quickest way to get to the desktop in windows 10, is to right click the windows icon at the lower left, and choose desktop from the bottom of the list.Excellent advice on the disabling the Font cache. ![]() Apparently you will have to disable it with every major windows update. To speed Nexusfont up substantially, you have to disable the Windows Font Cache Service. In Windows 10 something happened to the font caching in the Anniversary update. So Nexus font is for combing through my NON-INSTALLED font collection. My installed fonts are easily managed within Xara, as typically all I need to know is what a desired font looks like. I typically only use a Font Manager to find a particular font so that I can install it. Most font managers I've used in the past do not work in tandem with an application. FontBase uninstalled.Įxcept for being able to duck out of Xara and install fonts, OoG, NexusFont doesn't interact with Xara at all. Not sure what FontBase's features are anymore, but the deal-breaker was that it appears full-screen at my pathetic 1280 × 1024 screen resolution. OOg, what I like most about it, is once you're loaded (or the program is loaded), you have a number of options right where one might expect them: install/uninstall, properties/charmap when you right-click over a font sample, color font size, preview sentence easy to get to. Almond! That is an exaggerated number, I hope! If this is any gauge, 45 typefaces took about 18 seconds to load, about 3 per second, which must be painfully slow for all your 11,000 fonts, Mr. I've got it to launch and load 45 typefaces right now that I'm evaluating by comparison for a gig. ![]() I don't have that problem, though, because by default, I don't ask for Installed fonts to be displayed. Don't like it at all - Not can't use it, it's quite useable, just don't like it.True: NexusFont takes longer than one would wish for installed fonts to be enumerated. ![]() I've tried FONTBASE twice now, and uninstalled it twice. The ONLY downside is having to wait while it loads 11,000 fonts. In general, if you see that the font after activation is visible in a simple standard application like WordPad and is not visible in Adobe application, this is a signal that the font is installed correctly in operating system and this issue is the matter of compatibility of Adobe app and the way how and where the font was installed.I love Nexusfont. over 4 years ago from No Name, Non Would love to hear whats out there and what everyones experiences have been Aside: apparently typing 'font' in the Story Title on DN automatically selects the Typography badge. Thus in the latest release of FontExpert we had to set the default type of installation in Windows 10 to the one we used in earler version - installation for All users (which is not as convenient as the installation for current user as it requires from user to confirm administrator provileges).ģ) Sometimes when you activate a font it may have slightly different font name in Adobe fonts menu. 8 Whats the best font manager right now Im tired of SkyFonts. In FontExpert we have supported this new type of installation provided by Microsoft in Windows 10, but users has reported that they do not see the fonts in Adobe applications when the fonts are installed for current user. It seems Adobe applications do not recognize fonts when they are installed "for current user". This is a very old problem and it was described on FontExpert support forum.Ģ) Latest version of Windows 10 supports new type of font installation: for the Current User. The reasons why Adobe applications may not recognize the fonts visible to other applications (like Wordpad) are the following:ġ) PostScript (Type 1) fonts may not be visible in Adobe app if the font are installed in a folder on a local disk, while Adobe applications accept them if the Type 1 fonts are located in a special common folder known to Adobe.
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