[Cross-Posted ] 26 NOV 2002, NEW DELHI. Two school students, Avneesh Chhabra (15) and Shivaas Gulati (15) designed a Hindi Devanagri font for an inter-school contest. They won the event, received assurances from Microsoft that the Seattle-based company may be interested in licensing the fonts from them, and then, on 25 November 2002, decided nevertheless to publish the fonts under the freedom-based Lesser Gnu Public License (LGPL).
Wow! The fonts will be published on the Indian Linux User Group Delhi website, www.ilugd.org, and people across the world are free to download, to use, and to modify, and to modify the fonts as they feel fit, under the LGPL license (www.gnu.org for more info.) The decision to release it under the LGPL has been made by them so that those making embedded systems that may not be published under GLP-ed firmware, such as cellphones, handheld computing devices, consumer digital/electronic devices, etc. could still use the fonts under the terms of the LGPL license. quite far-sighted. Even generic software that may not be published under the GPL license, such as Adobe Acrobat Reader or Microsoft Reader, or the several varieties of eBook viewing software, could use the LGPL-ed fonts. To boldly say no to Microsoft's offer and to go the LGPL way, especially in a country like India, and that too for such young students, is rather revolutionary. Am sure Fred in Goa, for instance, may wish to research and do an article on this, both for indian and for international publication. What motivated them to move towards free software, despite our education system being so closely dependent and almost governed by the whims of the proprietory-software companies? Why did they say no to a potentially lucrative deal, and give away their work for free, when even our governments, policy-makers, and even the media, explores the significance of free software to a developing country like india with extreme reservations and caution. Would be nice if this gets to see the light of the day at the OSDN (OpenSource Development Network). Would appreciate if others could spread the word of this across to others as far and as wide as possible. The school students groped their way around on their own. Briefly, they searched and downloaded a fully-functional demo software from the web, called "Font Creator Program 3." They then hand-created the glyphs, digitised them, touched them up in a raster app, and finally imported them into FontCreator. The software automatically traced and generated a truetype version of the font. The font aesthetics are good. However, several things need to be done, and the students hope gurus, peers, and experts will guide them further. Things-to-Do: i) keyboard-mappings need to follow INSCRIPT. ii) the unicode assignments need to be verified. iii) hinting codes need to be generated. iv) the font needs to be converted into OpenType. The students are willing to learn further. They are looking for experts to conduct a workshop at their school (perhaps a few months later once the dreaded final exams are over.) And they wish for more and more students from across India to take the initiative and design, encode, and create indian language solutions under free software to create a 'digital revolution' in indian software development that bridges the digital divide in the country. for those interested, the email ids of the two students is [EMAIL PROTECTED] please do not respond directly to me, i have no further information to share. contact avneesh and shivaas directly. LL ================================================ To unsubscribe, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with unsubscribe in subject header. Check archives at http://www.mail-archive.com/ilugd%40wpaa.org