Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Monotype is introducing an HTML5-based Web font platform

Monotype, one of the world’s biggest typeface companies and owner of Helvetica, is looking to change the way we view fonts on the Web. The company is today announcing a Web font platform that runs on HTML5 to give designers access to its catalog of nearly 100,000 fonts.


With the slow but steady death of Adobe Flash, web designers have looked to doing as much as possible within HTML5. One limitation so far, however, has been the access to quality fonts. There are some solutions out there, like Google Web Fonts, but they are generally limited to a small selection of not-very-exciting designs.


Monotype is looking to create an all-in-one platform that takes advantage of its expertise and selection. Whereas previously brands would have to search, apply, license and publish Web fonts separately, Monotype’s platform aims to walk you through the complete process in one solution.





Brands can license new fonts, import previously licensed ones, or use third-party font kits from approved sources, and Monotype includes 14 font families by default out of its huge catalog. To save load times on ads, a subsetting API makes sure that font files only contain the characters needed for a particular campaign.


Though currently the Web font platform is aimed at brands and businesses to start, the company hopes to soon bring it to consumers. For now though, developers can try out a demo or request access over at the link below.



Sunday, May 10, 2015

Microsoft Office 2016 to feature co-editing

Soon, multiple people will be able to work on the same Word document simultaneously, and even see each others' changes as they are typed out in real-time.

At the Ignite conference, held this week in Chicago, Microsoft demonstrated the new co-editing capability which lets two or more people edit a Word document at the same time. It can be tested in a a preview edition of the software suite released this week.

Today, joint editing of the same Word document can be complicated, as people make changes to the file on their local devices and email it to their colleagues for further modifications, often resulting in the existence of multiple drafts. Co-editing eliminates the need to email the same document back and forth among different participants.

Real-time co-editing has been available in Microsoft's Office Web apps since 2013, and is also offered by rival products such as Google Docs.

"People have been interested in moving that same capability down to the rich app on the device," said Jared Spataro, a Microsoft general manager for the Office marketing group.

When in collaborative mode, Word will show how someone else is editing the document "character by character," Spataro said. The person making the edits is identified by a small set of initials hovering by the cursor making the change.

Key to making the file available to all parties is storing it in the cloud, either in OneDrive or OneDrive for Business. At present, there is no limit to the number of people who can work on a single document at the same time.

The technology still needs to be finalized, Spataro said. For instance, the development team is still working out how to handle collisions, when two people are working on the exact same part of the text. This could be handled by locking the paragraph or the sentence that one person is editing, so others can't access it.

Eventually co-creation will also be offered in PowerPoint and Excel as well, Spataro said.

Microsoft Office 2016 is due to be released by the end of the year.

Joab Jackson -- U.S Correspondent