Mali

Bold

Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee

Semi-Bold

Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj

Medium

Kk Ll Mm Nn

Regular

Oo Pp Qq Rr

Light

Ss Tt Uu Vv

Extra Light

Ww Xx Yy Zz

The quick


oynx


goblin


jumps over

the lazy

dwarf

t

u

o

b

a

Mali is a Thai and Latin family which was inspired by a 6th graders' handwriting. It exudes a carefree and naive appearance.

Designer Cadson Demak Cadson Demak is the first Thai communication design firm to develop type design solutions. Founded in 2002, the studio came together through a shared love of typography and design, a wish to expand and modernize the font industry as a whole, and the desire to make everyday use of type more accessible. They expanded from a modest design firm with dozens of their own typefaces into a boutique type foundry under the name Cadson Demak in 2008.

rL

7gGF

&G

641@8546

3R1684

75*9@

RpBm

^j(E)B

!oWN%

*VxX$

It’s been a year since Google announced AMP support would be coming to its email apps and web clients, and the rollout has finally started. (A handful of other email providers have joined the cause as well.)

AMP—short for “Accelerated Mobile Pages”—is being hyped as the next big step for email, akin to how RCS is the next big step for mobile carrier text messages (also backed by Google, naturally). It has been around since 2015 or so, and has traditionally been used to help developers build faster, more responsive websites.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.

Will this change how I use email?

Yes, insofar as it’ll make some emails look and act differently and reduce the number of external pages or apps you need to juggle for completing email tasks. But while AMP will likely make communication smoother for businesses and gives developers a wider toolset to use for email, in general, this new technology won’t change the messages you send to others.

It’s been a year since Google announced AMP support would be coming to its email apps and web clients, and the rollout has finally started. (A handful of other email providers have joined the cause as well.)

AMP—short for “Accelerated Mobile Pages”—is being hyped as the next big step for email, akin to how RCS is the next big step for mobile carrier text messages (also backed by Google, naturally). It has been around since 2015 or so, and has traditionally been used to help developers build faster, more responsive websites.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.

Will this change how I use email?

Yes, insofar as it’ll make some emails look and act differently and reduce the number of external pages or apps you need to juggle for completing email tasks. But while AMP will likely make communication smoother for businesses and gives developers a wider toolset to use for email, in general, this new technology won’t change the messages you send to others.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.

Will this change how I use email?

Yes, insofar as it’ll make some emails look and act differently and reduce the number of external pages or apps you need to juggle for completing email tasks. But while AMP will likely make communication smoother for businesses and gives developers a wider toolset to use for email, in general, this new technology won’t change the messages you send to others.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.

Will this change how I use email?

Yes, insofar as it’ll make some emails look and act differently and reduce the number of external pages or apps you need to juggle for completing email tasks. But while AMP will likely make communication smoother for businesses and gives developers a wider toolset to use for email, in general, this new technology won’t change the messages you send to others.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.

Will this change how I use email?

Yes, insofar as it’ll make some emails look and act differently and reduce the number of external pages or apps you need to juggle for completing email tasks. But while AMP will likely make communication smoother for businesses and gives developers a wider toolset to use for email, in general, this new technology won’t change the messages you send to others.

It’s been a year since Google announced AMP support would be coming to its email apps and web clients, and the rollout has finally started. (A handful of other email providers have joined the cause as well.)

AMP—short for “Accelerated Mobile Pages”—is being hyped as the next big step for email, akin to how RCS is the next big step for mobile carrier text messages (also backed by Google, naturally). It has been around since 2015 or so, and has traditionally been used to help developers build faster, more responsive websites.

AMP can also make email messages more interactive and helpful. Instead of emails being a static container of text, images, links, and maybe an attachment or two, developers can create AMP-based emails that act like self-contained web pages; you won’t have to open a new browser tab or app to complete tasks like booking a hotel, opening attachments, or filling out a survey. Instead, you can do all these actions within the email.