Good Morning,
I know some of you here have been working with Mac's from the very beginning of the Apple, and you have a very deep understanding of the OS and the process with how it interacts with your applications. I submit these questions to gather some of your insite on how I can truly become an expert with my fonts.
I'm a 20 yr PC user, but converted to the Mac about 6 months ago ( VERY GLAD I DID! ) and I'm moving right along with my development tools, etc.
I'm not a "Design Guru" but I use many fonts over the course of my presentation work. My company probably owns 500 or so that I have access to on a daliy basis. This morning while digging through the Font Book ( OSX 10.4.2 ) I added "ALL" of my fonts to the system ... thought I was browsing them, and I added them.
Two Questions:
1 - Should I remove all of them that I don't use on a regular basis? If so, why?
2 - Do I have to buy a tool like FontAgent or Extensis to really be able to work with my Fonts and "manage" them? Or is Font Book enough?
Thanks for your input.
I know some of you here have been working with Mac's from the very beginning of the Apple, and you have a very deep understanding of the OS and the process with how it interacts with your applications. I submit these questions to gather some of your insite on how I can truly become an expert with my fonts.
I'm a 20 yr PC user, but converted to the Mac about 6 months ago ( VERY GLAD I DID! ) and I'm moving right along with my development tools, etc.
I'm not a "Design Guru" but I use many fonts over the course of my presentation work. My company probably owns 500 or so that I have access to on a daliy basis. This morning while digging through the Font Book ( OSX 10.4.2 ) I added "ALL" of my fonts to the system ... thought I was browsing them, and I added them.
Two Questions:
1 - Should I remove all of them that I don't use on a regular basis? If so, why?
2 - Do I have to buy a tool like FontAgent or Extensis to really be able to work with my Fonts and "manage" them? Or is Font Book enough?
Thanks for your input.