pc to mac

Happy Day, My Fonts Work!

I admit it, I obsess about fonts.  I love fonts. I find every excuse I can to buy a new font. I believe that fonts are a critical aspect in turning a good-looking graphic into an eye-catching graphic, even (especially) if it's the banner to a website. I have purchased a lot of fonts over the years, and I was told at the Apple store that the fonts I purchased for the Windows OS were not going to work on my iMac. That seriously bummed me. With the tiniest hope I tried copying my font folder from Windows onto my new iMac, then adding them to my Font Book, but it didn't work.

There was one font I desperately wanted to use, so I tried again even though I knew it would be to no avail. This time I took my original file download and copied that onto my iMac. Note the difference - I didn't copy from the Windows Fonts folder, I copied the original .TTF file I had downloaded. I then added it to the Font Book (found in Applications), and it worked! I have since added numerous True Type Fonts and Open Type Fonts (OTF), and they've all worked so far, as long as I used the original download. Hooray!!!


To Err or Not To Err

That really is the question, another frustration I have with my new iMac. The operating system is so accommodating, it happily does whatever you tell it to do. Or not. But no matter what, it never complains. Users may not like to see all the error messages you encounter on a PC, but at least with the error messages you know what's going on. The iMac doesn't return any error, ever, from what I can tell, it just silently ignores your command like an obstinate child.

For instance, when I tell iMovie to import a really big .AVI file, it appears to do so. It grays out files that it can't import as movies, and the AVI files aren't grayed out, seems like it should work. After selecting an AVI, it even tells me it's processing afterwards. Then I sit and wait, wondering just how long it takes to import. But it never does import the AVI video because iMovie can't import AVI files, which you can find out by research, but certainly not by the program telling you or returning any errors. 

Do you know, the index of the Mac book I bought doesn't even have "error" in the index! Perhaps this is why Mac-nuts rave about how great it is?