Create. Develop.
Complete. Deliver.
Make world-class
fonts with FontLab 8
Turn letters into art
Express your imagination, prototype and experiment.
Draft glyphs with bitmap
autotracing and live
calligraphic strokes.
Draw and edit beautiful,
smooth, consistent glyphs in fractional or
integer precision, with the help of intelligent
snapping and live numeric and
visual measurements.
Refine your drawings: create
overlaps, simplify paths,
equalize stems. Scale while
keeping stroke thickness,
globally adjust weight and width,
find & fix imperfections.
Make words look good
Build and assemble glyphs from variable
components or from self-adjusting segment or corner
skins. Add
accented glyphs with a simple double-click.
Space and kern in multi-line tabs or windows
that feel like a text editor.
Add typographic smartness like ligatures, small caps, old-style
numerals with automatically-generated
OpenType features, and test them in the
integrated state-of-the-art complex-script text engine.
Give text a voice
Explore new directions with color and variation. Extend and
complete any font in FontLab, or in mix with other font editors.
Create, open, extend, test and
export font families,
variable OpenType fonts,
color fonts and web fonts for
any Unicode writing system.
Interchange with other font editing apps like
FontForge, RoboFont or Glyphs. Supercharge your
workflow with powerful add-ins and Python 3 scripts.
Windows Server 22h2
The 22H2-aligned feature set assumes Azure Arc as the control plane:
Windows Server 2022 is not a revolutionary leap; it is a necessary, stability-focused evolution. It prioritizes security and hybrid cloud integration over flashy new features, making it the most secure and robust version of Windows Server to date, though perhaps the least exciting for those seeking major UI or management changes.
It loses points for not modernizing the management interface fully, but gains points for being an incredibly stable, secure, and boring (in a good way) enterprise operating system. It does exactly what a server OS should do: stay out of the way and let the workloads run.
The 22H2-aligned feature set assumes Azure Arc as the control plane:
Windows Server 2022 is not a revolutionary leap; it is a necessary, stability-focused evolution. It prioritizes security and hybrid cloud integration over flashy new features, making it the most secure and robust version of Windows Server to date, though perhaps the least exciting for those seeking major UI or management changes.
It loses points for not modernizing the management interface fully, but gains points for being an incredibly stable, secure, and boring (in a good way) enterprise operating system. It does exactly what a server OS should do: stay out of the way and let the workloads run.