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Chicago (1984 by Susan Kare, pre-Mac OS 8 system font, also used by early iPods) Geneva (1984 by Susan Kare), sans-serif font inspired by Helvetica. Converted to TrueType format and still installed on Macs. Espy Sans (1993, EWorld, Apple Newton and iPod Mini font, known as System on the Apple Newton platform) System (1993, see Espy Sans)
The design references a number of different other typefaces, notably FF DIN (used in the UI of the Camera app in iOS 7 and iOS 8), Helvetica (used in the UI in iOS 6 and below), Helvetica Neue (used in the UI of iOS 7 and iOS 8 as well as OS X Yosemite, with some devices even with iOS 4 through iOS 6), Roboto (Google's new UI typeface), and ...
SF has the codename SFNS in macOS and SFUI in iOS, regardless of the official name. Stylistic fonts exist, which are mainly present in the iOS 16 Lock Screen, Apple Cash, watchOS Watch Faces, and several promotional materials. These include chiseled, stenciled, semi-rounded, dotted, prisma, railed, and slab-serif versions.
Product Sans is a contemporary geometric sans-serif typeface created by Google for branding purposes. [2] [3] It replaced the old Google logo on September 1, 2015.As Google's branding was becoming more apparent on multiple device types, Google sought to adapt its design so that its logo could be portrayed in constrained spaces and remain consistent for its users across platforms.
If the size of the text on your screen is too hard to read comfortably, you can easily change it. Learn how to make the font bigger or smaller on your web browser.
The Google Maps apps for iOS and Android have many of the same features, including turn-by-turn navigation, street view, and public transit information. [211] [212] Turn-by-turn navigation was originally announced by Google as a separate beta testing app exclusive to Android 2.0 devices in October 2009.
Apple, Google and Microsoft independently developed different color-font solutions for use in OS X, iOS, Android and Windows. OpenType and OFF already had support for monochrome bitmap glyph, so Google proposed that OFF be extended to allow for color bitmaps. Apple adopted this approach but declined to participate in extending the ISO standard.
In late 2009, tensions between Google and Apple started when the Android version of Google Maps featured turn-by-turn navigation, a feature which the iOS version lacked. At the time, Apple argued that Google collected too much user data. [10] When Apple made iOS 6 available, Google Maps could only be accessed by iOS 6 users via the web. [11]