Result for 5D2E38B45A65FAE05EA6873E31E69F6CF3392F73

Query result

Key Value
FileNamegfs-porson-fonts.spec
FileSize3779
MD522293C81C630BE62E385978DDD5F6D48
SHA-15D2E38B45A65FAE05EA6873E31E69F6CF3392F73
SHA-256490501F110F4C7C696F8ADB6363032FB47BF9D78AC2B68BFD272994EA36DBCAC
SSDEEP96:JRC4pMiH4RFi8rOLOuPKDfOt8IzEDM+y6OT175k5iqe0Avy8o2O8E:J80MtQLO7zOt8IzEDA/Z75k5s5NK
TLSHT1E471D73321000A3B73AA4B97B12587B59CB442FFF64B508D78DC03551756876B63338B
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5329AF5A2484C403D86222C74D0C0EBBE
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionIn England, during the 1790’s, Cambridge University Press decided to procure a new set of Greek types. The university’s great scholar of Classics, Richard Porson was asked to produce a typeface based on his handsome handwriting and Richard Austin was commissioned to cut the types. The type was completed in 1808, after the untimely death of Porson the previous year. Its success was immediate and since then the classical editions in Great Britain and the U.S.A. use it, almost invariably. In 1913, Monotype released the typeface with some corrections, notably replacing the upright capitals suggested by Porson with inclined ones. In Greece the typeface was used under the name Pelasgika type. GFS Porson is based on the Monotype version, though using upright capitals, as in the original.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegfs-porson-fonts
PackageRelease14.fc15
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-1F4ACED8FA85E623A957D85B8DAF7E9D2E8CDD356
SHA-2566258BBEF143633F5CC9B3B3F85000ED03C06AA7DCDCB10A55459F64E97EBD308