
Latha (Win2K & above), Vijaya (Win7 & above) They are loaded along with the installation of the OS (operating system) itself or along with the installation of certain Microsoft products.

MS has developed Unicode fonts specific to each Indian language. Note that to extract files from '.tgz' archives, you can use Winzip to extract files from '.deb' archives, you can use 7zip. then, to extract them, use applications like Winzip or 7zip. If the fonts you download are inside archived files. Note: 'ttf-indic-fonts_0.5.10.tar.gz' in Link5 above contains fonts for all prominent Indian languages in one single archive with fonts for each language already segregated in separate folders. Link8 - fonts installed automatically, along with Microsoft products Link7 - 100s of free Tamil Unicode fonts. Link6 - A few good Malayalam Unicode fonts Otherwise, when you type using Azhagi+'s Grantha XML, only Bengali characters will get displayed. So, before availing Azhagi+'s Grantha XML to start typing in Grantha, you need to download and install the e-Grantamil font.

Please note that these fonts were not developed by me but by other developers. Links to download the same are given below. There are 100s of free Unicode fonts available on the net for various Indian languages like Tamil, Hindi, Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Konkani, Gujarati, Bengali, Punjabi, Oriya, Assamese, Kashmiri, Sourashtra, etc. 100s of Free Unicode Fonts for Indian Languages
