Difference between revisions of "Installing Fedora 10 Generic Notes"
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This is a guide for generic installation notes of Fedora. This guide is worked on to be complete as of November 25th (Fedora 10 Release). | This is a guide for generic installation notes of Fedora. This guide is worked on to be complete as of November 25th (Fedora 10 Release). | ||
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== Better Fonts == | == Better Fonts == | ||
I recommend to set the system font to use the "Liberation Fonts" (Liberation Sans, Liberation Serif and Liberation Mono). | I recommend to set the system font to use the "Liberation Fonts" (Liberation Sans, Liberation Serif and Liberation Mono). | ||
To further improve the appereance of the fonts on TFT displays you might as well want to install the package "freetype-freeworld" from the [http://rpmfusion.org/ RPMFusion] Repository. Basically that is the freetype library with the patent encumbered bytecode interpreter turned on. | To further improve the appereance of the fonts on TFT displays you might as well want to install the package "freetype-freeworld" from the [http://rpmfusion.org/ RPMFusion] Repository. Basically that is the freetype library with the patent encumbered bytecode interpreter turned on. |
Latest revision as of 20:43, 29 October 2010
Installing Fedora 10 Generic Notes
This is a guide for generic installation notes of Fedora. This guide is worked on to be complete as of November 25th (Fedora 10 Release).
Better Fonts
I recommend to set the system font to use the "Liberation Fonts" (Liberation Sans, Liberation Serif and Liberation Mono). To further improve the appereance of the fonts on TFT displays you might as well want to install the package "freetype-freeworld" from the RPMFusion Repository. Basically that is the freetype library with the patent encumbered bytecode interpreter turned on.