In this article I review the Computer Says No font by Christian Munk.
You will learn what Computer Says No font look like, its main details, where to use and where to download it from.
If you like this font, make sure you check how you can use it to create a geeky Valentine’s Day card on Canva.
Computer Says No is a font created by Christian Munk and first posted onFontstruct.com.
The name of the font comes from a British TV programme called Little Britain.
The sentence is widely used in British culture to refer to customer service representatives who rely on information stored on computers to make decisions and deal with the general public.
Yes, it is free under the Creative Commons license.
The font is available for download from the following websites:
The font is also available on Canva.
Font Family | Computer Says No |
Font Style | Regular |
Font Version | 1.0 |
Typeface Type | Technology |
Characters | 2,689 |
Number of Gliphs | 2,692 |
Font Weight | Normal |
Font Width | Medium |
Languages | Georgian Latin Cherokee Runic Thai Cyrillic Greek Armenian Symbols |
Unicode Blocks | Basic Latin Latin-1 Supplement Latin Extended-A Latin Extended-B IPA Extensions Spacing Modifier Letters Greek and Coptic Cyrillic Cyrillic Supplement Armenian Thai Georgian Cherokee Runic Phonetic Extensions Phonetic Extensions Supplement Latin Extended Additional Greek Extended General Punctuation Superscripts and Subscripts Currency Symbols Letterlike Symbols Number Forms Box Drawing Block Elements Latin Extended-C Latin Extended-D Alphabetic Presentation Forms |
File Format | TTF |
Main discussion thread on Fontstruct.com
Pasquale is Founder at Increasily.com, a digital strategy agency based in Dublin, Ireland; and Co-Founder at luxury ecommerce marketplace Thesidebe.com. Pasquale has +15 years of experience in Digital Marketing and Account Management. He currently lives in Dublin with his wife, stepdaughter and cat.
Pasquale Mellone