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History of commit frequency

CVS Commit History:


   2005-02-23 20:18:29 by Alistair G. Crooks | Files touched by this commit (85)
Log message:
Add RMD160 digests to the SHA1 ones.
   2004-01-25 21:31:59 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (2)
Log message:
Install into TTF instead of TrueType subdir. PKGREVISION=2.
   2003-07-17 23:50:07 by grant beattie | Files touched by this commit (1504)
Log message:
s/netbsd.org/NetBSD.org/
   2003-06-02 03:21:53 by Jan Schaumann | Files touched by this commit (1131)
Log message:
Use tech-pkg@ in favor of packages@ as MAINTAINER for orphaned packages.
Should anybody feel like they could be the maintainer for any of thewe packages,
please adjust.
   2003-04-17 17:59:38 by Lubomir Sedlacik | Files touched by this commit (1) | Package updated
Log message:
Bump PKGREVISION: use fonts.mk to correctly update fonts.dir, delint.
   2003-03-29 13:43:15 by Julio Merino | Files touched by this commit (795)
Log message:
Place WRKSRC where it belongs, to make pkglint happy; ok'ed by wiz.
   2003-03-28 22:14:42 by Thomas Klausner | Files touched by this commit (93)
Log message:
NO_PATCH is deprecated, says pkglint. Remove it.
   2002-12-09 17:02:01 by Matthias Scheler | Files touched by this commit (115)
Log message:
Replace "true" by "${TRUE}".
   2002-08-05 15:29:14 by Bernd Ernesti | Files touched by this commit (4) | Imported package
Log message:
Import geoslab703-ttf package from Rui-Xiang Guo in pkg/17828.

This package installs two free TrueType fonts, they are useful for web viewing.

The typeface is Geometric Slabserif 703, which is Bitstream's version of
Memphis  a typeface designed in 1930 by Rudolph Weiss. While it may seem odd
that a typeface designed 65 years ago would look good on-screen today,
the reason has to do with the shape of the letterforms themselves.

They have a simple, geometric shape, and their serifs (the small protrusions
from the ends of the letter) are in the "slab" family, which means \ 
they, too,
are simple. The "x-height" (the height of the lowercase letter \ 
"x") is
relatively large, but not so large that it makes reading difficult in the web
where there is little real control over leading (the space between the lines).

Bitstream is supplying these typefaces to help you see the importance of type
on the web. Once you see how different web pages can look just by changing the
typeface, and how much easier they can be to read, you'll see the importance of
typographic choice on the web.


Next | Query returned 19 messages, browsing 11 to 20 | previous