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Steve Jobs wore black Monday, and not just because that’s the Apple CEO’s usual sartorial color of choice. Instead, Jobs donned his trademark black mock turtleneck to preside over a funeral for Mac OS 9.

So as a coffin appeared on the San Jose Convention Center stage and Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D Minor echoed through the crowded exhibit hall, Jobs kicked off Apple’s annual developers conference by laying to rest OS 9, eulogizing the classic Mac OS as “a friend to us… always at our beck and call, except when he forgot who he was and needed to be restarted.”

The opening of Jobs’ keynote may have lacked subtlety, but it drove home Apple’s message to the Mac software developers in attendance–drop whatever work you’re doing in the old Mac OS and shift all your efforts to the operating system of the future.

“Mac OS 9 isn’t dead for our customers yet, but it’s dead for [developers],” Jobs said. “Today we say farewell to OS 9 for all future development, and we focus our energies on developing for Mac OS X.”

But Jobs did more Monday than just exhort software makers to shift all their development to OS X; he also gave them something to develop for, providing the first public glimpse at the next major update to OS X. Code-named Jaguar and slated for a late summer release, the update will add a built-in instant messenger client, handwriting recognition technology, a new version of Sherlock, and improvements to OS X’s Mail and Finder, among other features.

“After we got OS X 10.1 out, we had a chance to bring out the next wave of new technologies to put into your hands,” Jobs said.

100-Percent X

The annual developer conference gives Apple a chance to sit down with software makers and pore over the nuts and bolts of creating Mac products. It also provides Apple with a forum for spelling out the future direction of the platform. Last year, Apple used the conference to announce that OS X would come pre-installed on every new Mac, a sign of what Jobs called “a total commitment on Apple’s part.” This year, Jobs asked for that same kind of commitment from developers.

The numbers are certainly in OS X’s favor. The new operating system began 2002 with one million active users, according to Apple. The company forecasts that five million users will have turned to OS X by the end of the year.

Mac developers have pushed out roughly 3,000 OS X-native applications since the operating system’s March 2001 debut. However, many of those programs run on both OS 9 and OS X–“understandable in this transition,” Jobs said. What Apple would like to see now is more companies following the lead of Microsoft, which announced last month that all future product releases would be OS X-only, like its native Office v.X productivity suite.

Indeed, Apple plans to follow the same course of action. Jobs cited the recent release of iPhoto–another OS X-only application–and said Apple’s future development plans will focus entirely on the new OS.

“One hundred percent of everything we’re doing is X-only,” he said.

Meet Jaguar

That includes Jaguar, the next major version of OS X. Apple expects to release another minor update to the OS before Jaguar arrives by late summer of 2002.

When it is released, Jaguar will introduce a number of changes into OS X. Look for spring-loaded folders–a familiar element from the classic Mac OS–to appear in the Finder, working in icon, list, and column views. The Finder also adds multithreading support and an integrated search function.

OS X’s Quartz engine will undergo an overhaul, creating what Apple bills as Quartz Extreme. The improvement–which requires AGP 2X graphics cards and 32MB of video RAM–is a hardware-accelerated graphics and compositing engine.

Quartz figures into another improvement introduced in Jaguar–universal accessibility. Using the graphics engine, Mac users can zoom in on portions of the screen, making it easier to see text files and QuickTime movies. Other accessibility enhancements include a screen reader that will read any text you place a cursor over, full keyboard access, and visual notification.

Jaguar promises to improve OS X’s Mail feature, adding intelligent spam filtering, auto-merged mailboxes, cross-mailbox searching, color highlighting to set apart threads and messages from specific people, and QuickTime support. The update also adds an Address Book that can, in theory, be used with any OS X application. As an example, Jobs talked about using the Address Book’s rollover menu to automatically dial a phone number from a Bluetooth-enabled cell phone.

Jaguar will also incorporate updated versions of existing Apple software. QuickTime 6, announced earlier this year will be integrated into Jaguar, featuring full support for MPEG-4 encoding and decoding and Advanced Audio Coding (AAC). The OS X update will ship with Sherlock 3. The latest version of the Internet search and services engine will add new channels that look for images, news, and Yellow Pages-type content.

What’s New

Besides updating existing features and applications, Jaguar will introduce new capabilities to OS X. Chief among them is Inkwell, a handwriting recognition technology that will look familiar to anyone who’s ever seen a Newton handheld device in action.

“You’d think that hundreds of millions of dollars on Newton technology would get us something,” Jobs said.

Inkwell will work with any application that accepts text input. Ken Bereskin, Apple’s director of product marketing for OS technologies, demonstrated Inkwell in Adobe Photoshop 7, using a pen tool and his own handwriting to change the text of a banner.

Canadian Nuts Mac Os X

Jaguar’s release will mark the debut of iChat, an instant messaging software that’s compatible with AOL’s AIM instant messaging client. “We are thrilled to be working with AOL on this,” Jobs said. “They’re even adopting some of the features we’re pioneering back into their app.”

Mac users won’t need an AOL account to tap into iChat–they can use their Mac.com name. Apple’s instant messaging program will use dialogue bubbles and photos to display messages as if they were a conversation.

Rendezvous–Apple’s proposed industry standard for dynamic discovery of computers and devices on IP–will also find its way into the Jaguar OS X update. Using Rendezvous, Macs will be able to recognize one another and share files. Jobs demonstrated the technology by playing streaming music files off the iTunes playlist of another Mac connected to an AirPort network.

“This can happen with Music. This can happen with photos. This can happen with files,” Jobs said.

Other Goodies

Jaguar promises something for everyone. On the Unix front, the update includes FreeBSD 4.4, GCC 3, IPv6 and IPSec, the CUPS printing engine, LDAP, and Kerberos full-authentication service. “Mac OS X is the best Unix platform on the desktop, and we’re going to make it better,” said Philip Schiller, Apple senior vice president of worldwide product marketing.

On the Windows front, Jaguar adds SMB browsing and sharing, built-in PPTP VPN security, and Active Directory support. Educational users will benefit from additions such as NetInstall and NetBoot, improved network management, and printer sharing “so that next school year, they can begin to adopt Mac OS X more widely,” Schiller said.

Monday’s keynote was free of any product announcements–hardly surprising, since Apple unveiled its education-friendly eMac and updated PowerBooks a week ago. But Jobs did hint at a product announcement to come. On May 14, Apple plans on introduce a rack-mount server.

This list of fonts contains every font shipped with Mac OS X 10.0 through macOS 10.14, including any that shipped with language-specific updates from Apple (primarily Korean and Chinese fonts). For fonts shipped only with Mac OS X 10.5, please see Apple's documentation.

System fonts up to Mac OS X 10.7[edit]

Family NameSubtypeStyles AvailableTarget script and other notes
Al Bayannon-LatinRegular, BoldArabic
American Typewriterserif, bookCondensed Light, Condensed, Condensed Bold, Light, Regular, Bold
Andalé Monosans-serif, mono, bookRegular, Bold
Apple CasualdisplayRegularHidden, see below
Apple ChanceryscriptRegular
Apple Garamondserif, bookLight, Light Italic, Book, Book Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicHidden, see below
Apple GothicRegularKorean
Apple LiGothicnon-LatinMediumTraditional Chinese
Apple LiSungnon-LatinLightTraditional Chinese
Apple Myungjonon-LatinRegularKorean
Apple SymbolspictureRegular
.AquaKanaRegularJapanese, Not depicted below
Arialsans-serif, bookCondensed Light, Narrow, Narrow Italic, Narrow Bold, Narrow Bold Italic, Regular, Italic, Bold, Rounded Bold, Bold Italic, BlackBundled with Microsoft Windows
Arial Hebrewnon-LatinRegular, BoldHebrew
Ayuthayanon-LatinRegularThai; not depicted below
Baghdadnon-LatinRegularArabic
Baskervilleserif, bookRegular, Italic, Semi-bold, Semi-bold Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Beijingnon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese; bitmap only
BiauKainon-LatinRegularTraditional Chinese; missing in Yosemite and El Capitan until Sierra.
Big Caslonserif, bookMedium
Browallia Newnon-LatinRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicThai, Bundled with Microsoft Windows
BrowalliaUPCnon-LatinRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicThai, Bundled with Microsoft Windows
Brush ScriptscriptItalic
Candarasans-serif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
Chalkboardsemi-boldRegular, BoldBold added in 10.4; Bold not depicted below
ChalkdusterboldRegularadded in 10.6; not depicted below
CharcoalRegularClassic only
Charcoal CYnon-LatinRegularCyrillic
Chicagosans, bookRegularClassic only, see Krungthep below
Cochinserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Comic SanscasualRegular, BoldBundled with Microsoft Windows
Consolassans-serif, monoRegular, Italic, Bold, ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
Cooperextra-boldBlack
Copperplateserif, title, small capsLight, Regular, Bold
Corsiva Hebrewnon-LatinRegularHebrew
Courierserif mono, bookRegular, Oblique, Bold, Bold Oblique
Courier Newserif mono, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
DecoType Naskhnon-LatinRegularNaskh Arabic; not depicted below
Devanagarinon-LatinRegular, BoldDevanagari
Didotserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold
Euphemia UCASsans-serif, bookRegular, Italic, BoldCanadian Syllabics; not depicted below
Futurasans-serif, bookCondensed Medium, Condensed Extra Bold, Medium, Medium Italic
Gadgetsans-serif, titleRegularClassic only
Geeza Pronon-LatinRegular, BoldArabic
Geezahnon-LatinRegularArabic
Genevasans-serif, bookRegular, Bold
Geneva CYnon-LatinRegularCyrillic
Georgiaserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Windows
Gill Sanssans-serif, bookLight, Light Italic, Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Gujaratinon-LatinRegular, BoldGujarati
Gung Seochenon-LatinRegularKorean, named '#GungSeo' in font list
Gurmukhinon-LatinRegularGurmukhi
Hangangchenon-LatinRegularKorean
HeadlineAnon-LatinRegularKorean, named '#HeadLineA' in font list
Heinon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
Helveticasans, bookRegular, Oblique, Bold, Bold ObliqueSystem Font for Small Text
Helvetica CYnon-Latin, sans, bookRegular, Oblique, Bold, Bold ObliqueCyrillic; Face is condensed compared to Helvetica, Helvetica Neue
Helvetica Neuesans, bookCondensed Bold, Condensed Black, Ultra-light, Ultra-light Italic, Light, Light Italic, Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Herculanumdisplay, deco, upper caseRegular
Hiragino Kaku Gothic Pronon-LatinW3, W6Japanese
Hiragino Kaku Gothic ProNnon-LatinW3, W6Japanese based on JIS X 0213
Hiragino Kaku Gothic Stdnon-LatinW8Japanese
Hiragino Kaku Gothic StdNnon-LatinW8Japanese based on JIS X 0213
Hiragino Maru Gothic Pronon-LatinW4Japanese
Hiragino Maru Gothic ProNnon-LatinW4Japanese based on JIS X 0213
Hiragino Mincho Pronon-LatinW3, W6Japanese
Hiragino Mincho ProNnon-LatinW3, W6Japanese based on JIS X 0213
Hoefler Textserif, bookRegular, Italic, Black, Black Italic, OrnamentsRe‐added in 10.3, but present in System 7.5 also
Inai Mathinon-LatinRegularTamil; added in 10.4; not depicted below
Impactsans, titleRegularBundled with Compacting Fonts
Jung Gothicnon-LatinMediumKorean
Kainon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
KeyboardRegular
Krungthepnon-LatinRegularThai; Latin characters identical to Chicago; not depicted below
KufiStandard GKnon-LatinRegularArabic; not depicted below
Kuenstler ScriptscriptRegular, Black
LastResortRegularKeyboard
LiHei Pronon-LatinMediumTraditional Chinese
LiSong Pronon-LatinLightTraditional Chinese
Lucida Sanssans, bookRegular, Bold, Italic, Bold ItalicIncluded from MacOS
Marker FeltcasualThin, Wide
Menlosans-serif, monoRegular, Bold, Italic, Bold Italic
Monacosans-serif, monoRegular
Monaco CYnon-LatinRegularCyrillic
Mshtakannon-LatinRegular, Oblique, Bold, Bold ObliqueArmenian; added in 10.3; not depicted below
Nadeemnon-LatinRegularArabic
New Peninimsans-serif, bookRegular, Inclined, Bold, Bold InclinedHebrew
New Yorkserif, bookRegular, Bold, Italic, Bold ItalicClassic only
NISC GB18030non-LatinRegularChinese; bitmap only; not depicted below; named 'GB18030 Bitmap' in font lists
Optimasans-serif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Extra Black
Osakanon-Latin monoRegular, MonospaceJapanese
Palatinoserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicClassic or iLife
Papyruscasual, normalRegular, Condensed
PC Myungjonon-LatinRegularKorean, named '#PCMyungjo' in font list
Pilgichenon-LatinRegularKorean, named '#PilGi' in font list
Plantagenet Cherokeeserif, bookRegularCherokee
Raanananon-LatinRegular, BoldHebrew
Sandbold italicRegular
Sathunon-LatinRegularThai; not depicted below
Seoulnon-LatinRegularKorean
Shin Myungjo Neuenon-LatinRegularKorean
Silomnon-LatinRegularThai; not depicted below
Skiasans-serif, bookLight, Light Condensed, Light Extended, Regular, Condensed, Extended, Bold, Black, Black Condensed, Black Extended
Snell RoundhandscriptRegular
ST FangSongnon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
ST FangSong 2non-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
ST Heitinon-LatinLight, RegularSimplified Chinese
ST Kaitinon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
ST Songnon-LatinRegularSimplified Chinese
SymbolsymbolRegularBundled with Microsoft Windows
Tae Graphicnon-LatinRegularKorean
Tahomasans, bookLight, Regular, BoldBundled with Windows
Taipeinon-LatinRegularTraditional Chinese; bitmap only; not depicted below
Technosans, titleRegularClassic only
Textilebold italicRegularClassic (and iDVD)
Thonburinon-LatinRegularSuspended by Geneva
Timesserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic
Times CYnon-Latin, serifRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicCyrillic; removed from 10.4
Times New Romanserif, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
Trebuchet MSsans, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
Verdanasans, bookRegular, Italic, Bold, Bold ItalicBundled with Microsoft Windows
Zapf ChanceryscriptMedium ItalicClassic only
Zapf DingbatspictureRegular
Zapfinoscript, decoRegular

New fonts added with OS X 10.10 Yosemite[edit]

The following system fonts have been added with Yosemite:

  • ITC Bodoni 72: Book, Italic, Bold (these three in separate fonts with lining and text figures), Small Caps, Ornaments (Sumner Stone)
  • ITF Devanagari
  • Kohinoor Devanagari (Satya Rajpurohit)
  • Luminari (Philip Bouwsma)
  • Phosphate: Inline and Solid (Steve Jackaman & Ashley Muir)
  • Shree Devanagari 714 (Modular Infotech)
  • SignPainter (House Industries)
  • Skia: Light, Light Condensed, Light Extended, Condensed, Extended, Bold, Black, Black Condensed, Black Extended (Matthew Carter; system previously only included regular)
  • Sukhumvit Set: Thin, Light, Text, Medium, SemiBold, Bold (Anuthin Wongsunkakon; previously used as a system font for iOS 7.0[1])
  • Bitstream Symbols
  • Trattatello (James Grieshaber)

New fonts added with OS X 10.11 El Capitan[edit]

At least the following system fonts have been added with El Capitan:

  • PingFang SC / PingFang TC / PingFang HK, a new set of Chinese UI Fonts produced by DynaComware in lieu of deprecated STHeiti Family.
  • San Francisco UI / Display / Text.

New fonts added with macOS 10.12 Sierra[edit]

At least the following system fonts have been added with Sierra:

  • Toppan Bunkyu Mincho Pr6N Regular
  • Toppan Bunkyu Midashi Minchoi StdN ExtraBold
  • Toppan Bunkyu Gothic Pr6N Regular / Demibold
  • Toppan Bunkyu Midashi Gothic StdN Extrabold
  • Monotype LingWai Medium (SC / TC)
  • Songti (SC / TC)
  • Yu Kyokasho N (Medium / Bold) (Vertical Version / Horizontal Version)
  • San Francisco Mono

New fonts added with macOS 10.13 High Sierra[edit]

High Sierra added several system fonts or additional weights of existing system fonts:

  • Charter (Roman, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Black, Black Italic)
  • DIN (Alternate Bold, Condensed Bold)
  • Hiragino Kaku Gothic StdN W8
  • InaiMathi (Bold)
  • Kai (Regular)
  • Kaiti SC (Regular, Bold, Black)
  • Myriad Arabic (Semibold)
  • Noto Nastaliq Urdu
  • Rockwell (Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic)
  • STIX Two Math
  • STIX Two Text (Regular, Italic, Bold, Bold Italic)

macOS 10.14 Mojave[edit]

No new fonts were provided with Mojave.

Font appearances[edit]

  • These images compare Roman fonts only, in most styles:
  • The fonts in the following list were included as 'extras' with AppleWorks 6,[2] which was bundled with new iMacs until 2006.[3]

Hidden fonts[edit]

A number of fonts have also been provided with iMovie, iLife, iDVD and other Apple applications in hidden folders, for the sole use of these applications. The reason why these fonts are hidden is unknown, with licensing issues suggested as the cause. However, one may easily install them for use by all applications by copying them out of their Library directories and installing them as with any third-party font, although one should always check that the license for the fonts allows them to be used outside the given software.[4]

Canadian Nuts Mac Os 11

Notable hidden fonts on macOS include Bank Gothic, Bodoni, Century Gothic, Century Schoolbook, Garamond, several cuts of Lucida and Monotype Twentieth Century.

See also[edit]

Canadian nuts mac os download

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Sakawee, Saiyai (December 16, 2013). 'Apple could be bringing back the old Thai font in iOS 7.1 update'. www.techinasia.com. Retrieved December 26, 2020.
  2. ^Elferdink, Jim & David Reynolds, AppleWorks 6: The Missing Manual, p. 422
  3. ^Williams, Warren & Cathleen Merritt, AppleWorks Journal, March 2006, p. 7
  4. ^Tomalty, Fletcher. 'Hidden fonts on Mac OS X'. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2014.

References[edit]

  • Apple's font list for 10.3 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.4 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.5 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.6 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.7 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.8 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.9 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.12 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.13 (names only, no images)
  • Apple's font list for 10.14 (names only, no images)
  • Advanced Typography with Mac OS X Tiger (Appendix B contains representations of Latin fonts included with Mac OS 10.4 Tiger)
  • Code Style's survey of Mac OS fonts (includes OS 8/9 users)
  • Szántó Tibor: A betű (The type) (Hungarian; Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1982, ISBN963 05 0327 1), Chapter XVI.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_typefaces_included_with_macOS&oldid=1007711392'