winety

joined 2 years ago
[–] winety@communick.news 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Yes, they do. Part of the OpenType standard are the so called “OpenType features” which (amongst other things) allow for contextual alternates, i.e. different kinds of ligatures, and for stylistic alternates, e.g. a slashed zero, a single-storey ɑ, etc. All of these different glyphs are encoded in the font and can be enabled when typesetting using different selectors. This website shows them off.

Some ligatures, like “ffl”, are a separate character in Unicode. Some were added because they can be considered a different character in languages other than English. Some (like “ffl”) were added because of legacy reasons; “no more will be encoded in any circumstances”.

[–] winety@communick.news 1 points 2 years ago

It's OpenTTD, hands down. I think source ports and game reimplementations are where open source shines its best.

[–] winety@communick.news 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

To anyone who isn’t interested in Japanese-style visual novels, I’d recommend Scarlet Hollow. It’s an “immersive horror-mystery” illustrated by Abby Howard (of The Last Halloween fame). It’s an episodic title (the first episode is free on Steam) and sadly it is not finished yet.

[–] winety@communick.news 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I don’t think the current Red Hat controversy will have much impact on Fedora. There are the three reasons why I think so:

  • While Fedora is not a fully independent distribution, the Fedora Council has both members from Red Hat and members from the community. It may be wishful thinking, but I believe that, if Red Hat tried something iffy with Fedora, the community (including people in leading positions) would protest.
  • Fedora is upstream from RHEL, so it doesn’t directly profit from RHEL source codes being fully open. Instead, it’s the other way around; Fedora’s sources are the basis of CentOS and then RHEL, so any bugs fixed in Fedora benefit RHEL.
  • Fedora is also Red Hat’s tool for influencing the Linux ecosystem at large. When they want other people start using some technology (Flatpak, PulseAudio etc.), Fedora is a good way of disseminating it.

P.S. There might be some inaccuracies. I am just a user; I am neither a developer nor in any leadership role.

P.P.S. Please excuse any spelling and grammar mistakes. English is not my first language.

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