Since you are not allowed to redistribute Latha, Mangal, et. al., this is really not going to be too much of a hardship for anyone playing by the rules, is it? :-)
They can always legally obtain Arial Unicode MS or Code 2000 and then have support via fonts that definitely have such ranges represented.... MichKa Michael Kaplan Trigeminal Software, Inc. -- http://www.trigeminal.com/ ----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Jansson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 2:34 AM Subject: Re: Unicode Devanagari Font in Mozilla > > James Kass wrote: > > The best way to render a Devanagari page is with Unicode encoding > > and smart font technology. With an up-to-date version of the > > Uniscribe software installed, Devanagari can be properly displayed > > even on Win 9x, as long as the browser uses the Uniscribe engine. > > You need to be careful when using Uniscribe on Win9x. Installing certain > Indic fonts and Uniscribe on unsupported platforms (Win9x) will > unfortunately corrupt these systems. The problem is that Win9x will > misbehave when seeing fonts without code page support, such as Indic fonts > with no Latin characters. > > Regards, > - Michael > >

