![]() ![]() ![]() I tried it out for myself and it manages to show you fonts that really look a lot like each other. QuickMatch lets you locate similar fonts down the glyph level with one click. The font sorting capability might be more of a reason. The Yosemite interface isn’t either, although it looks gorgeous. But corruptionn checking isn’t the main reason why you’ll want to upgrade to Suitcase Fusion 6. It doesn’t matter much, though, as corruption checking can be done from within Suitcase Fusion itself. FontDoctor may need some medical care itself, so I think the mention of it on the Suitcase Fusion website should be removed. The new version should too according to the website, but the version of FontDoctor I downloaded didn’t work on Yosemite. In the past, Suitcase Fusion always came with FontDoctor. It must be, as it tags every fonts you let it manage with a unique Font Sense fingerprint so that duplicate fonts never cause a problem on your system. Suitcase Fusion also is the most reliable font manager. One of the best must be QuickComp, a prototyping feature that enables you to see how fonts will look in specific designs, including your own. Over the past upgrades Suitcase Fusion has gained a number of nice features that are much appreciated by designers. ![]() Especially if you have 2219 fonts like I do or more, Apple’s Font Book is a disaster waiting to happen. That’s a small miracle in its own right, given the number of unstable apps I’ve been reviewing it with. Suitcase Fusion is about the only font manager that has never caused any problems on my machine. The sixth iteration of Suitcase Fusion Extensis brings us compatibility with Yosemite and Windows 8, modern HTML5 based font panels in applications like Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign and cloud based archive and restore. ![]()
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