Font are licensed with specific software and operating systems.
Arial Unicode MS was never supplied with Microsoft Windows.

It was supplied with Microsoft Office suite applications, and I don't recall seeing it much after Office 2003, when Microsoft started distributing other fonts such as Calibri, and Consolas.


Microsoft stopped "servicing and updating" the font, but you can purchase updated versions from Monotype. Microsoft also stopped supporting some older font types in their Office products.

Regards
// Simon BUCH


On 14/08/2020 13:34, Lin Sims wrote:
I can tell you one thing the regular Arial font doesn't have that Arial
Unicode does: glyphs for subscript numbers. This is something my company
needs because we do a lot of measurements. Luckily, the font we use for our
brand is Source Sans Pro, which does have those glyphs.

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