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However, my son downloaded a copy of Microsoft Keyboard Layout Creator, installed it on a computer that had the keyboard already installed, loaded the keyboard into Creator and save it as a 64 bit.
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msi and there are definitely issues when transferring from 32 bit to 64 bit software.
DOWNLOAD COPTIC READER FOR THE COMPUTER .EXE
exe format and the Logos Coptic keyboard install file is a.
DOWNLOAD COPTIC READER FOR THE COMPUTER SOFTWARE
It appears that at least this version of 7 doesn’t like installing any software that isn’t in a. Imagine my joy when I discovered that I couldn’t install the Logos keyboard on my new computer!!! Not sure whether it is because I ordered the 64 bit option (poor reading of specs rather than intention) or because of some change made between the beta and the final release, but not happy. The language option is not offered with Business or any lower versions and Ultimate also comes with BitLocker which is what sold it to my programmer son. My son had a beta version of Windows 7 installed on his computer and was able to install the Logos Coptic keyboard quite happily, so I waited until Dell was offering laptops with 7 pre-installed and bought one with Windows 7 Ultimate which promises that you can install programs built for older versions of Windows, work in the language of your choice and switch between any of 35 languages (includes Greek and Hebrew but not Coptic). Recently I bought my own laptop because I was going to have to return the church one and I figured that I probably didn’t really want to stay with XP which Microsoft will probably stop supporting soon. When I got my previous computer about two and a half years ago (courtesy of the church) it came with Windows Vista installed on it but I couldn’t get it to install the Logos Coptic keyboard, so I “downgraded” to Windows XP which I was happier using, anyway.
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Question: can anyone recommend a free or very inexpensive Coptic Unicode font that they have used on a PC and liked? Non-Roman Keyboards in Windows 7 Note that there was a new version of New Athena released in December 2009 in response to a request for glyph variants for some papyrological symbols. I’m using New Athena as my Coptic font but it’s too rounded for my taste and if I don’t find something better, I may well do a global exchange to Damase for my final versions, although I don’t like either of these fonts as much as some of the non-Unicode fonts. It has a Greek character set which, while not particularly pretty, is serviceable, so I am using it for the occasional Greek word that I type, although I will probably change it to something more attractive for final versions. This is truly bizarre.Īt the moment, the default font in most of my documents is Cambria – a serif font that installs with Office 2007 for Windows. If I type them directly into Damase, they don’t sit in the right places. I used this for a while but discovered that the supralinear strokes only line up over the letters properly if you (or at least I) type them in New Athena first and then change them to Damase. I then found MPH 2B Damase, which has less ornate Roman characters and is somewhat more compact in general. I went through a phase when I did all my documents in New Athena Unicode because I could type English, Coptic and Greek without having to change fonts, but the Roman font is too ornate for my liking and my principal supervisor/advisor kept marking my manuscript to say that I’d omitted spaces when I hadn’t – the uppercase letters were just too big and the kerning wasn’t right. I am now wondering what other people who have PCs use when they type Coptic. I was reading through the post and comments about it on Rod Decker’s New Testament Resources Blog and the discussion about people’s favourite Greek fonts re-awakened my interest in Coptic Unicode font. Having been somewhat preoccupied by my employment situation during the past year, I have only just caught up with the fact that the new SBL Unicode font was released in March (I don’t type much Greek, so it wasn’t a big deal).