I've updated our Liberation fonts to the new 2.0 version. The 2.0 version are basically rebased on the Chromeos/Croscore fonts and are under the OFL instead of the GPL+exception license of the 1.X series.
The Liberation fonts 1.X and ChromeOS/Croscore fonts both originate from the same designer[s] (IIUC) and the glyph-points they shared have identical designs, except that the ChromeOS/Croscore ones had a lot more glyphs. The point of these fonts is that they are metrically equivalent to Times New Roman, Arial and Courier. With the improved coverage, it might be the case that it makes sense to put the Liberation Fonts as an option for default fonts for more languages in VCL.xcu. The Liberation-*-Narrow 1.X fonts however did not have ChromeOS/Croscore equivalents, and were not donated by Red Hat, but by Sun Microsystems. So those font faces currently remain under the GPL+exception and are not part of the OFL Liberation Fonts 2.0. Which is a long-winded way to document that it's not an error that we have both liberation-fonts-ttf-1.07.1.tar.gz liberation-fonts-ttf-2.00.0.tar.gz in our download list. We retain the 1.07.1 version and extract just the Narrow faces from that and extract the full set of fonts of the 2.00.0 package. C. http://fedoraproject.org/w/index.php?title=Features/Liberation_Fonts_2 _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice