View Full Version : Font folder
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 26th 04, 04:22 PM
One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer showing
as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead of "TT"
icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple of
seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
heck is going on here?
HFEvans
Cerridwen
February 26th 04, 05:43 PM
wrote:
> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer showing
> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead of "TT"
> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple of
> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
> heck is going on here?
>
> HFEvans
1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform format that can be
used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was developed by Adobe, which
licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your problem, as Windows
XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based OSes - 9x-based require
Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon everyone has their own
personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a problem so they can
send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine the person-power
that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a database and used to
produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details' button it will tell you
the name of the file causing the problem. You can download TweakUI from
Microsoft (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoys.asp)
which may help to repair it, but it may only repair superficial damage - not
file damage as you're describing.
3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also recommend downloading
Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-wide scan. It probably
won't help, but it can't hurt either.
4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the document isn't too
personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a copy of the font, and
I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you don't have a copy
of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from www.rarsoft.com) - the
package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore) garlick (at) hotmail
(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at that address and
I'll give you my ISP address.
5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing this to you. Please do
NOT include your real email address here, as you leave yourself open to all
kinds of nasties.
In future, please post all replies to the group.
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 27th 04, 06:05 AM
>-----Original Message-----
wrote:
>> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer
showing
>> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead
of "TT"
>> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
>> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
>> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
>> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
>> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
>> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple
of
>> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
>> heck is going on here?
>>
>> HFEvans
>
>1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform
format that can be
>used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was
developed by Adobe, which
>licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your
problem, as Windows
>XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based
OSes - 9x-based require
>Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
>
>2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon
everyone has their own
>personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a
problem so they can
>send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine
the person-power
>that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a
database and used to
>produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details'
button it will tell you
>the name of the file causing the problem. You can
download TweakUI from
>Microsoft
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoy
s.asp)
>which may help to repair it, but it may only repair
superficial damage - not
>file damage as you're describing.
>
>3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also
recommend downloading
>Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-
wide scan. It probably
>won't help, but it can't hurt either.
>
>4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the
document isn't too
>personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a
copy of the font, and
>I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you
don't have a copy
>of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from
www.rarsoft.com) - the
>package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore)
garlick (at) hotmail
>(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at
that address and
>I'll give you my ISP address.
>
>5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing
this to you. Please do
>NOT include your real email address here, as you leave
yourself open to all
>kinds of nasties.
>
>
>In future, please post all replies to the group.
>
>
>.First of all thanks for your response. I will try to
post this same msg. to the community folder as well.
OK, here's what I've discovered since I posted the email.
The "Marigold" font, whereas it used to show up on the
screen as a TrueType font, is now showing only as
a "scalable font", so when I actually go to print the
file (a business card created on Publisher), it prints
correctly. However, I distinctly remember seeing the
TrueType font on screen when I created it originally.
Which brings me to think that maybe I created the
original file just before I installed my current computer
(Publisher 2000), and on the older computer I had
specially downloaded the "marigold" font from a CD but
the file, of course, did not transfer to the new
computer, so when I open up the old Publisher ap file, it
doesn't show correctly on screen.
However, now that this mystery seems to be solved, I'm
still having a major problem opening my Fonts Folder in
general. It will stay open, but with an error message
that we're all growing tired of "Windows Explorer has
encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry
for the inconvenience." When I click on technical
details, it mentions a file that "will be include in this
error report" that starts out with a generic path within
my personal settings that ends
in: "...Temp\WER8BC.tmpdir00\appcompat.txt " Can you
make sense of this?
But funny, everytime I try to open to get this error
message to display the supposed problem file so I can
copy it down on paper, the "WER8BC" file section within
the path changes each time. Does this signify anything to
you?
****, I am generally somewhat competent with computers (
I do a virus scan at least weekly through Norton System
Works Anti-Virus, as well as running general diagnostics
each week), but I am muddled when this kind of hell
breaks loose for no apparent reason...the fonts folder
not opening? Please! 'Course, I guess it gets even more
inexplicable. God love these blasted computers!
By the way, I don't know if I can copy and paste this
into a community postings on MS Support website, but I
will try. For now, I will send it as a reply to your
email addresss, hoping that you are not some infectious
scum waiting to terrorize any email address that you come
across.
I loved your sarcastic response to my waiting around for
MS to respond to my "send error report"...hilarious!
>
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 27th 04, 06:07 AM
>-----Original Message-----
wrote:
>> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer
showing
>> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead
of "TT"
>> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
>> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
>> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
>> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
>> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
>> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple
of
>> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
>> heck is going on here?
>>
>> HFEvans
>
>1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform
format that can be
>used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was
developed by Adobe, which
>licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your
problem, as Windows
>XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based
OSes - 9x-based require
>Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
>
>2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon
everyone has their own
>personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a
problem so they can
>send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine
the person-power
>that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a
database and used to
>produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details'
button it will tell you
>the name of the file causing the problem. You can
download TweakUI from
>Microsoft
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoy
s.asp)
>which may help to repair it, but it may only repair
superficial damage - not
>file damage as you're describing.
>
>3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also
recommend downloading
>Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-
wide scan. It probably
>won't help, but it can't hurt either.
>
>4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the
document isn't too
>personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a
copy of the font, and
>I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you
don't have a copy
>of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from
www.rarsoft.com) - the
>package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore)
garlick (at) hotmail
>(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at
that address and
>I'll give you my ISP address.
>
>5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing
this to you. Please do
>NOT include your real email address here, as you leave
yourself open to all
>kinds of nasties.
>
>
>In future, please post all replies to the group.
>
>
>.First of all thanks for your response. I will try to
post this same msg. to the community folder as well.
OK, here's what I've discovered since I posted the email.
The "Marigold" font, whereas it used to show up on the
screen as a TrueType font, is now showing only as
a "scalable font", so when I actually go to print the
file (a business card created on Publisher), it prints
correctly. However, I distinctly remember seeing the
TrueType font on screen when I created it originally.
Which brings me to think that maybe I created the
original file just before I installed my current computer
(Publisher 2000), and on the older computer I had
specially downloaded the "marigold" font from a CD but
the file, of course, did not transfer to the new
computer, so when I open up the old Publisher ap file, it
doesn't show correctly on screen.
However, now that this mystery seems to be solved, I'm
still having a major problem opening my Fonts Folder in
general. It will stay open, but with an error message
that we're all growing tired of "Windows Explorer has
encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry
for the inconvenience." When I click on technical
details, it mentions a file that "will be include in this
error report" that starts out with a generic path within
my personal settings that ends
in: "...Temp\WER8BC.tmpdir00\appcompat.txt " Can you
make sense of this?
But funny, everytime I try to open to get this error
message to display the supposed problem file so I can
copy it down on paper, the "WER8BC" file section within
the path changes each time. Does this signify anything to
you?
****, I am generally somewhat competent with computers (
I do a virus scan at least weekly through Norton System
Works Anti-Virus, as well as running general diagnostics
each week), but I am muddled when this kind of hell
breaks loose for no apparent reason...the fonts folder
not opening? Please! 'Course, I guess it gets even more
inexplicable. God love these blasted computers!
By the way, I don't know if I can copy and paste this
into a community postings on MS Support website, but I
will try. For now, I will send it as a reply to your
email addresss, hoping that you are not some infectious
scum waiting to terrorize any email address that you come
across.
I loved your sarcastic response to my waiting around for
MS to respond to my "send error report"...hilarious!
>
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 27th 04, 06:09 AM
>-----Original Message-----
wrote:
>> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer
showing
>> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead
of "TT"
>> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
>> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
>> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
>> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
>> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
>> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple
of
>> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
>> heck is going on here?
>>
>> HFEvans
>
>1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform
format that can be
>used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was
developed by Adobe, which
>licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your
problem, as Windows
>XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based
OSes - 9x-based require
>Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
>
>2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon
everyone has their own
>personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a
problem so they can
>send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine
the person-power
>that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a
database and used to
>produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details'
button it will tell you
>the name of the file causing the problem. You can
download TweakUI from
>Microsoft
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoy
s.asp)
>which may help to repair it, but it may only repair
superficial damage - not
>file damage as you're describing.
>
>3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also
recommend downloading
>Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-
wide scan. It probably
>won't help, but it can't hurt either.
>
>4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the
document isn't too
>personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a
copy of the font, and
>I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you
don't have a copy
>of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from
www.rarsoft.com) - the
>package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore)
garlick (at) hotmail
>(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at
that address and
>I'll give you my ISP address.
>
>5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing
this to you. Please do
>NOT include your real email address here, as you leave
yourself open to all
>kinds of nasties.
>
>
>In future, please post all replies to the group.
>
>
>.First of all thanks for your response. I will try to
post this same msg. to the community folder as well.
OK, here's what I've discovered since I posted the email.
The "Marigold" font, whereas it used to show up on the
screen as a TrueType font, is now showing only as
a "scalable font", so when I actually go to print the
file (a business card created on Publisher), it prints
correctly. However, I distinctly remember seeing the
TrueType font on screen when I created it originally.
Which brings me to think that maybe I created the
original file just before I installed my current computer
(Publisher 2000), and on the older computer I had
specially downloaded the "marigold" font from a CD but
the file, of course, did not transfer to the new
computer, so when I open up the old Publisher ap file, it
doesn't show correctly on screen.
However, now that this mystery seems to be solved, I'm
still having a major problem opening my Fonts Folder in
general. It will stay open, but with an error message
that we're all growing tired of "Windows Explorer has
encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry
for the inconvenience." When I click on technical
details, it mentions a file that "will be include in this
error report" that starts out with a generic path within
my personal settings that ends
in: "...Temp\WER8BC.tmpdir00\appcompat.txt " Can you
make sense of this?
But funny, everytime I try to open to get this error
message to display the supposed problem file so I can
copy it down on paper, the "WER8BC" file section within
the path changes each time. Does this signify anything to
you?
****, I am generally somewhat competent with computers (
I do a virus scan at least weekly through Norton System
Works Anti-Virus, as well as running general diagnostics
each week), but I am muddled when this kind of hell
breaks loose for no apparent reason...the fonts folder
not opening? Please! 'Course, I guess it gets even more
inexplicable. God love these blasted computers!
By the way, I don't know if I can copy and paste this
into a community postings on MS Support website, but I
will try. For now, I will send it as a reply to your
email addresss, hoping that you are not some infectious
scum waiting to terrorize any email address that you come
across.
I loved your sarcastic response to my waiting around for
MS to respond to my "send error report"...hilarious!
>
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 27th 04, 06:16 AM
>-----Original Message-----
wrote:
>> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer
showing
>> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead
of "TT"
>> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
>> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
>> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
>> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
>> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
>> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple
of
>> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
>> heck is going on here?
>>
>> HFEvans
>
>1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform
format that can be
>used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was
developed by Adobe, which
>licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your
problem, as Windows
>XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based
OSes - 9x-based require
>Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
>
>2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon
everyone has their own
>personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a
problem so they can
>send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine
the person-power
>that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a
database and used to
>produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details'
button it will tell you
>the name of the file causing the problem. You can
download TweakUI from
>Microsoft
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoy
s.asp)
>which may help to repair it, but it may only repair
superficial damage - not
>file damage as you're describing.
>
>3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also
recommend downloading
>Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-
wide scan. It probably
>won't help, but it can't hurt either.
>
>4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the
document isn't too
>personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a
copy of the font, and
>I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you
don't have a copy
>of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from
www.rarsoft.com) - the
>package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore)
garlick (at) hotmail
>(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at
that address and
>I'll give you my ISP address.
>
>5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing
this to you. Please do
>NOT include your real email address here, as you leave
yourself open to all
>kinds of nasties.
>
>
>In future, please post all replies to the group.
>
>
>.First of all thanks for your response. I will try to
post this same msg. to the community folder as well.
OK, here's what I've discovered since I posted the email.
The "Marigold" font, whereas it used to show up on the
screen as a TrueType font, is now showing only as
a "scalable font", so when I actually go to print the
file (a business card created on Publisher), it prints
correctly. However, I distinctly remember seeing the
TrueType font on screen when I created it originally.
Which brings me to think that maybe I created the
original file just before I installed my current computer
(Publisher 2000), and on the older computer I had
specially downloaded the "marigold" font from a CD but
the file, of course, did not transfer to the new
computer, so when I open up the old Publisher ap file, it
doesn't show correctly on screen.
However, now that this mystery seems to be solved, I'm
still having a major problem opening my Fonts Folder in
general. It will stay open, but with an error message
that we're all growing tired of "Windows Explorer has
encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry
for the inconvenience." When I click on technical
details, it mentions a file that "will be include in this
error report" that starts out with a generic path within
my personal settings that ends
in: "...Temp\WER8BC.tmpdir00\appcompat.txt " Can you
make sense of this?
But funny, everytime I try to open to get this error
message to display the supposed problem file so I can
copy it down on paper, the "WER8BC" file section within
the path changes each time. Does this signify anything to
you?
****, I am generally somewhat competent with computers (
I do a virus scan at least weekly through Norton System
Works Anti-Virus, as well as running general diagnostics
each week), but I am muddled when this kind of hell
breaks loose for no apparent reason...the fonts folder
not opening? Please! 'Course, I guess it gets even more
inexplicable. God love these blasted computers!
By the way, I don't know if I can copy and paste this
into a community postings on MS Support website, but I
will try. For now, I will send it as a reply to your
email addresss, hoping that you are not some infectious
scum waiting to terrorize any email address that you come
across.
I loved your sarcastic response to my waiting around for
MS to respond to my "send error report"...hilarious!
>
dukegirl@mindspring.com
February 27th 04, 06:26 AM
>-----Original Message-----
wrote:
>> One of my TrueType fonts (Marigold) is not longer
showing
>> as a TrueType font (rather as an "O" icon instead
of "TT"
>> icon), and a document I created in Publisher using this
>> font is now all screwed up. When I try to open my Fonts
>> Folder from Control Panel, it sometimes doesn't open at
>> all, thus prompting a "send error problem to Microsoft"
>> window (which I do, but I haven't had any feedback from
>> MS). Sometimes the font folder will open for a couple
of
>> seconds then automatically close. REgardless, what the
>> heck is going on here?
>>
>> HFEvans
>
>1) 'O' stands fo OpenType - which is a cross-platform
format that can be
>used on both Windows, Linux and Mac OS - it was
developed by Adobe, which
>licensed it to Microsoft. That isn't the source of your
problem, as Windows
>XP can handle OT fonts natively (as can all NT-based
OSes - 9x-based require
>Adobe Type Manager to utilise them).
>
>2) Why should you receive feedback - you reckon
everyone has their own
>personal advisor at MS just waiting for them to have a
problem so they can
>send them a personalised email solution? Can you imagine
the person-power
>that would involve? ;o) They are collated into a
database and used to
>produce Hotfixes. If you click on the 'more details'
button it will tell you
>the name of the file causing the problem. You can
download TweakUI from
>Microsoft
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/downloads/powertoy
s.asp)
>which may help to repair it, but it may only repair
superficial damage - not
>file damage as you're describing.
>
>3) Have you run a full virus scan? I would also
recommend downloading
>Spybot from www.safer-networking.org and do a system-
wide scan. It probably
>won't help, but it can't hurt either.
>
>4) What version of Publisher are you running? If the
document isn't too
>personal, would you mind forwarding it to me, with a
copy of the font, and
>I'll take a look. Please zip - or preferably RAR (if you
don't have a copy
>of WinRAR then a 30-day trial may be downloaded from
www.rarsoft.com) - the
>package, please. You can send it to magrat (underscore)
garlick (at) hotmail
>(dot) com. If it's larger than 1MB, please contact me at
that address and
>I'll give you my ISP address.
>
>5) I am breaking the habit of a lifetime emailing
this to you. Please do
>NOT include your real email address here, as you leave
yourself open to all
>kinds of nasties.
>
>
>In future, please post all replies to the group.
>
>
>.First of all thanks for your response. I will try to
post this same msg. to the community folder as well.
OK, here's what I've discovered since I posted the email.
The "Marigold" font, whereas it used to show up on the
screen as a TrueType font, is now showing only as
a "scalable font", so when I actually go to print the
file (a business card created on Publisher), it prints
correctly. However, I distinctly remember seeing the
TrueType font on screen when I created it originally.
Which brings me to think that maybe I created the
original file just before I installed my current computer
(Publisher 2000), and on the older computer I had
specially downloaded the "marigold" font from a CD but
the file, of course, did not transfer to the new
computer, so when I open up the old Publisher ap file, it
doesn't show correctly on screen.
However, now that this mystery seems to be solved, I'm
still having a major problem opening my Fonts Folder in
general. It will stay open, but with an error message
that we're all growing tired of "Windows Explorer has
encountered a problem and needs to close. We are sorry
for the inconvenience." When I click on technical
details, it mentions a file that "will be include in this
error report" that starts out with a generic path within
my personal settings that ends
in: "...Temp\WER8BC.tmpdir00\appcompat.txt " Can you
make sense of this?
But funny, everytime I try to open to get this error
message to display the supposed problem file so I can
copy it down on paper, the "WER8BC" file section within
the path changes each time. Does this signify anything to
you?
****, I am generally somewhat competent with computers (
I do a virus scan at least weekly through Norton System
Works Anti-Virus, as well as running general diagnostics
each week), but I am muddled when this kind of hell
breaks loose for no apparent reason...the fonts folder
not opening? Please! 'Course, I guess it gets even more
inexplicable. God love these blasted computers!
By the way, I don't know if I can copy and paste this
into a community postings on MS Support website, but I
will try. For now, I will send it as a reply to your
email addresss, hoping that you are not some infectious
scum waiting to terrorize any email address that you come
across.
I loved your sarcastic response to my waiting around for
MS to respond to my "send error report"...hilarious!
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