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How to Install New Fonts on Android: A Step-by-Step Tutorial

Use this tutorial to learn how to install new fonts on both rooted and unrooted Android devices via GO Launcher Ex, iFont and Font Installer. Android is one of the most versatile mobile ecosystems that you’ll ever use. From the look and feel, you can change the landscape of the platform with ease and power. The fonts on your system are no exception. There are plenty of reasons you might want to change up your fonts — legibility, company branding, a unique look and more. Although not available for…

How to add fonts to Google Slides: Step by step guide

Choosing the right font for your presentation is important. You want a font that’s easy to read, attractive, and looks clear on a computer screen or external monitor. While Google Slides has a good selection of fonts, you may want something different. Even though you cannot upload or use a font from your computer in Google Slides, there are ways to get more font choices. Add more fonts to Google SlidesWhen you want to change the current font you’re using in Google Slides, you simply pick one from the Font…

How to add fonts to LibreOffice: a step-by-step guide

Looking to add fonts to LibreOffice? We’ve talked before about how LibreOffice is one of the best possible Microsoft Word replacements and how its open platform compares to others. One of the big advantages is just how adaptable it is, no matter what kind of document you’re working on or want to transfer to the platform. That extends to the fonts you use in LibreOffice to get just the look you need. Let’s go over the basics of adding fonts, how you can do it, and how to adjust your font options. The good news…

How to easily install fonts in Linux on a per-user basis

Open your default file manager and navigate to the parent directory (such as the external drive) that will house the folder. Creating a new folder in the GNOME file manager. Image: Jack WallenWith that folder created, make sure to save all of your downloaded fonts into it (so you can use them again if needed).How to install fonts in the GNOME desktopFirst, let's take a look at how to install fonts in the GNOME desktop environment. After you've downloaded the fonts you want to install, you'll probably have to

How to add more fonts to Google Docs (and why you might want to)

Figure 3: The Google Docs Fonts pop-up window. Image: Jack WallenSelect as many fonts as you like. After making your selections, click OK, and your fonts will be added and are ready to select from the Fonts drop-down menu. You don't have to do this on a doc-by-doc basis. Once you add a new font, it'll be available for all your documents.And that's all there is to add some very nice fonts to Google docs. Although the default set of fonts is pretty good, you never know when you might find yourself in a

How to add fonts to Photoshop

I cannot stress this enough: always choose a reputable website to download files from. I've used Dafont for over a decade now, but there are many others you can use like Envato, 1001Fonts, Google Fonts, Creative Market, and many more.Step 2: Click Download Image: Maria Diaz / ZDNetI'll be choosing "Somebody Else" to add to Photoshop. If you want to view the font family, click on the name of it to the left. To download the font, click Download to the right.Step 3: Find the downloaded font Image: Maria Diaz /

Disco Elysium gets a free update with new dyslexia-friendly fonts

Disco Elysium’s newest update makes the game more accessible Disco Elysium is one of my favorite games of all time. I love recommending it to anyone who will listen, but something I forget is just how text-heavy that game is. I’m an avid reader, but for others, the game’s script, which clocks in at over a million words, can be pretty intimidating. The good news is, though, that the developers at ZA/UM are well aware of this fact, and have made a bunch of great changes since the game has come out to help make the game…

Instagram created custom fonts called ‘Instagram Sans’ for Reels and Stories

Instagram rolled out a big “brand refresh” today, which is mostly a fancy term for freshening up some marketing materials and making big hand-wavy statements about logos. And there’s plenty of that here, too. (Can I interest you in a long digression about illuminated gradients?) But there’s also one much bigger change: Instagram created its own typeface, called Instagram Sans, that it plans to use broadly going forward both in marketing and in the app itself. Instagram Sans was inspired by Instagram’s logo, the company…