Nothing more than Apple's renowned system font style "Geneva" in the bit map representation, but as a PostScript font; aliased like "Geneva" in 9 or 10 points, and even in resolutions that are too small, that is, under 8 points; suitable for "pixely" topics.
An metachronism in the digital age: While the entire world speaks of development, the font on the screen has just "advanced" into a non-pleasant-to-read combination of pixels. Each object on a screen is shown by lining up individual pixels. These pixels are so tiny, that they are barely perceivable. The more pixels per surface area unit (that indicates, the greater the resolution), the more the photo viewed by the eye combines into a sharply specified unit.
DePixel is based upon the display fonts "Geneva" and "Chicago," established by Apple Computer system. It simulates the setup of private pixels into letters. Hence, a font style emerged which, regardless of size, can be acknowledged by the structure of a couple of private pixels.
Font Family: