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Which is beta, FontExplorer or Suitcase?

By Mark Tennent in Reader

Posted in utilities on May 13, 2009 at 4:26 pm

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There are times when we could gladly throttle Steve Jobs and whoever makes decisions about the contents of Mac OSX. Currently it’s the old chestnut of font handling for which we would like to string-up someone at Apple from an infinite loop. Along with a representative from Linotype.

Like many designers who’ve been in the business for some years, we have an eclectic mix of fonts dating back well into the last century. Many are complete libraries we’ve picked up, usually as an added extra with other software or equipment. First was the Bitstream library circa 1990. In those days a few thousand quid’s worth and the fonts all ’nearly’ types. Bitstream versions of famous fonts come with a book of cross-referenced names. Gill Sans in Bitstream parlance, is Humanist 521, Méridien becomes Latin 725 and so on. All looking almost the same as their more famous versions but not quite. Letter-spacing differences between the different cuts can ruin documents.

The arrival of our Adobe library a year or so later was followed by URW’s, Monotype’s, ITC’s, Linotype’s… plus all the smaller foundaries. Other typefaces have come from clients with their own bespoke fonts such as John Lewis, the Tate Gallery and Superdrug. We have a heavy investment in typefaces and have always used a manager to control them, MasterJuggler was followed by Suitcase, then FontReserve (the all-time best) before Suitcase Fusion 12 took control of our typeface library.

Apple, the chosen system for all discerning creative types, has never built its own font manager. FontBook, it’s latest attempt at a font organiser, is lightweight at best and does not automatically open typefaces when software calls for them. The only previous Apple attempt dates to 1985-ish, called Font/DA mover.

After much agonising and largely because of an excellent review in MacWorld accompanied by a half-price offer, we shifted recently from Suitcase Fusion to Linotype FontExplorer Pro and then our problems began. The move being because the latest version of Suitcase Fusion will not open fonts for earlier versions of Adobe’s CS suite or QuarkXPress 6, only the most recent. On the other hand, FontExplorer has plug-ins for them all, as far back as QuarkXPress 6 and Adobe CS1. It seemed the best direction to go since we still have to work in legacy software as well as the most current.

Despite all attempts to clean our typefaces, running FontDoctor over them umpteen times to correct any glitches and creating new, organised libraries, FontExplorer tells us many thousands of our typefaces will not work. It thinks their printer font is separated from the outline font despite the two obviously being together in the same folder. We even converted our entire library to D-Fonts without success – this combines all the font’s attributes into one unified file. FontExplorer still insists the fonts are broken. The same fonts which Suitcase and FontReserve, et al, have had zero problems with for more than 10 years.

Then there are the plug-ins. FontExplorer should install a range of plug-ins for Adobe and Quark’s software. It scans your hard disks and finds the relevant applications but in our case not all of them. Instead it found parts of the Adobe CS 2 suite but not all, even though they are in the same folder, automatically created by Adobe’s installer. This is easy to fix by manually ‘finding’ the relevant plug-ins folders but we shouldn’t have to do this. In addition, it told us that inDesign CS2 had version 5 of a plug-in but we should downgrade it to version 3. Why?

Finally, FontExplorer crashes our system so that it needs a total reboot. Clicking on any option in FontExplorer which opens a dialogue box needing name and password freezes the whole Mac. Not any wimpy restart either but a rigid digit on the start button followed by a jolly good fscking afterwards to correct disk errors. According to Customer Support at Linotype, this is a known problem which will be fixed in the next version due to be released “soon”.

It took FontDoctor a few hours to extract our 10,000+ fonts, check them out and create a new combined library with alphabetical folders inside, one for each foundry. We reinstalled FontExplorer and stopped it from managing its own font folder, via the setting in its preferences. The foundry folders have been copied to FontExplorer one-by-one as a new set, which have been filed into a folder under the ‘Set’ tab.

This has been mostly successful but some fonts are double-listed with printer fonts listed as missing in one and not the other. Deleting the ‘broken’ versions also deletes the good.

The moral of this being, don’t let FontExplorer manage its own library. Instead do it manually or better still use the excellent FontDoctor and consider whether Suitcase Fusion might still be the better bet. However now it is up and running, FontExplorer isn’t all bad and seems much faster at opening fonts than Suitcase Fusion for documents containing a lot of typefaces in such as magazines or books. It also intercepts calls for typefaces from a whole bunch of programs such as Mail and Safari, ensuring we can see Spam in all it’s glory, exactly as it was meant to be seen.

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