Result for FBA435A79F58F52C037B19EDFBF66DF42EB67E34

Query result

Key Value
FileName./etc/fonts/conf.d/61-gfs-porson-fonts.conf
FileSize65
MD5685D3ADEBB954B00ACB6D1B124EF314B
SHA-1FBA435A79F58F52C037B19EDFBF66DF42EB67E34
SHA-256A1BF7BB11EEB7BAD0B3CFB244C875F595EAE5647DE060C9C34F4C6700498B4E6
SSDEEP3:gDGvWLUCdQDLETlJIU/ZdD1D:83/dQkJ1D1D
TLSHT1EAA02222B02C3CB03820C8C2B0000C002F800AE032083F00B02C882022E00C8030B300
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD59520A8EA13E5734387FC36C3B03761E4
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
PackageRelease32.fc33
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-1ACD30A82767B3AC33DDDCD3AB715B23C0C5F2B34
SHA-256AF0EF5066EA21E7F19F0AFAAE520AE7CCDF5A64E968E9CDBE564D09D0DF7C009
Key Value
MD5BBA2F4F82F9B04680DD3A503E961D1D0
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
PackageRelease32.fc33
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-12A6F744FB6F452A80EDD713EC4D7C976F9FEDE13
SHA-2563660A4AAFEB06F6EA95CB212D7D115E23BC8C7223AF9803002E4C8B810F23162
Key Value
MD5FE6BB95B5B57DF5242CA53077F7B4E29
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
PackageRelease30.fc32
PackageVersion20060908
SHA-194467340F8B8342FD21F4529DFC879C68030AB93
SHA-256D800FC026981AE9AB5F213F0F33909648B038ADEE102AC379CF47BF8AFC11A78