- Good choice – Inter is probably the best, most comfortable UI font IMO. Or Roboto. - Agreed, I love Inter. Recently the Blender project migrated to it as well. 
- Noto Sans and Zegoe UI (Zune version of Segoe UI) are my favorite. 
 
- No CJK support… very sad. 
- How is this an OSI-approved license when you’re not allowed to sell the font itself? - I haven’t found much of a convincing explanation, but here’s the OSI meeting notes from when it was approved: - […] Matt Flaschen believes it complies with the OSD. The chief concern is that you can’t sell the fonts as fonts — you can only redistribute them as data included with a program. Seems like a restriction, but that’s what we’ve had on the Bitstream fonts for three or four years now and nobody seems to complain about them. Recommend: Approval - Source: https://opensource.org/meeting-minutes/minutes20090401 - And I’m guessing, this is one of the Bitstream fonts that they’re talking about: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitstream_Vera#Licensing_and_expansion - Certainly seems a bit at odds with the OSD to me: - Free Redistribution
 - The license shall not restrict any party from selling or giving away the software as a component of an aggregate software distribution containing programs from several different sources. The license shall not require a royalty or other fee for such sale. - Source: https://opensource.org/osd - I kind of agree that I don’t care as much. There’s not as much need for modifying a font, because it fundamentally cannot do as much as a program. And if a modification becomes necessary, that’s not going to need as much budget, so there’s not as much need for being allowed to sell it. - But at the same time, it’s not like the OSI is the judge over good vs. bad. Certainly would like to know Matt Flaschen’s thoughts why this fits the OSD… 
 
- @neme on my laptop(1366x768), I always used Ubuntu Condensed 9 and work very well. - The Ubuntu fonts are so well designed, it’s really elegant 
 





