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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Local Media Browser 0.2 (Default branch) Post 302161651 by Linux Bot on Friday 25th of January 2008 08:50:07 AM
Old 01-25-2008
Local Media Browser 0.2 (Default branch)

Local Media Browser lets you access your collection of digital media files from a Web browser. It is designed for (but not limited to) low-powered clients (like the Nintendo Wii) on low-resolution displays (like TVs). It uses its own specialized Web server. It is fully customizable through easy HTML-templates, CSS, and ini-files. It currently supports picture and music files. It supports indexing and caching of information (such as thumbnails and ID3 tags) for fast browsing as well as on-the-fly gathering. License: GNU General Public License v3 Changes:
The music module is now running well. Local Media Browser now runs its own multi-threaded Web server on a custom port, so there is no need for a big Web server like Apache anymore. The templates were improved and look much nicer now. They are also easier to improve, as a simple template language is used.Image

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MKEOT(1)							   EOT UTILITIES							  MKEOT(1)

NAME
mkeot - generate Embedded OpenType SYNOPSIS
mkeot font-file [ URL [ URL ... ] ] > EOT-file DESCRIPTION
The mkeot command writes an EOT (Embedded OpenType) file on standard output that contains the given font file (OpenType or TrueType) and the given URLs. mkeot handles TrueType files, OpenType files with TrueType outlines, and OpenType files with Postscript outlines. (Technically: all files with the "sfnt" format.) However, Microsoft's Web browser Internet Explorer (version 8) cannot handle Postscript outlines. To use EOT files with that browser, OpenType files with Postscript outlines must be converted to TrueType files first. Several prgrams are able to do that, including the free fontforge. The URLs that are added to the EOT file list the Web pages on which the EOT font may be used. They act as prefixes, which means that, e.g., a URL such as http://example.org/foo enables a font not only for that precise page, but also for http://example.org/foo2 or http://exam- ple.org/foo/bar or any other pages whose URL starts with the prefix. The EOT specification allows EOT files without any URLs, but is not clear on the meaning of such a file. In practice, at least in Micro- soft's Internet Explorer (version 8), an empty list of URLs means the font applies to no Web page at all. EOT font are typically used for Web pages. To that end, a link (URL) to the EOT file must appear in the Web page's style sheet. A typical rule in CSS looks like this: @font-face { font-family: My Fancy Font; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal; src: url(http://example.org/fonts/fancy-roman.eot); } body { font-family: My Fancy Font, serif; } This downloads the EOT file from the given URL and declares it to be a font of normal weight and roman style with the family name "My Fancy Font." That font can then be used in style rules, such as, in this example, to set the font of body text. See the "CSS Fonts Module level 3" for details on CSS. TrueType files typically have the extension .ttf, OpenType files typically have the extension .otf and EOT files typically end in .eot. SEE ALSO
eotinfo(1), fontforge(1), WEFT (http://www.microsoft.com/typography/web/embedding/weft3/default.htm), EOT (http://www.w3.org/Submis- sion/2008/01/) CSS Fonts Module level 3 (see http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-fonts/) BUGS
mkeot does not apply the optional MicroType Express compression. mkeot may fail with fonts that have non-ASCII characters in their names. mkeot cannot handle fonts that use (only) language tags instead of traditional Microsoft/Apple language numbers in their names table. (Luckily, this feature of OpenType version 1.6 appears to be little used.) mkeot does not subset the font, unlike Microsoft's graphical WEFT tool. To make a EOT file with a reduced set of glyphs, you must first create a subsetted TrueType font with a font editor. 1.x 25 Jan 2010 MKEOT(1)
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