For some reason, this [Login to see the link] person continues to confuse everyone.
I will combine everything I've written above and clarify more simply:
If someone wants a streamlined package of Adobe Font Folio OTF (OpenType Format) fonts, the package we're discussing here, is the most straightforward. It's linked below for convenience.
It includes a beautiful typography sample book with every font listed (I've included it below, again).
If someone is worried they will miss files, I can assure you that I've compared both Font Folio and this new OTF edition.
-- The OTF edition has removed all of the legacy (no longer used) PFM files.
-- The OTF edition doesn't have the random (less than a dozen) .TTF alternates. When I say "less than a dozen", I'm referring to the number of files. It's only a couple named-typefaces and the files are redundant of the OTF.
-- The OTF edition excludes one single font: Arno Pro. I can upload that elsewhere if someone needs it.
-- The non-OTF version's higher font-count is a result of including all the old "dingbat" file (novelty, low-res icons).
All of the talk of "Official" and "Total Fonts" in the hundreds is non-sensical. A misunderstanding.
-- Adobe's old "Font Folios" counts "fonts" and font files ... NOT individual named typefaces.
-- Adobe doesn't advertise precise file number (eg "2197"; they round the number based on padded file-counts).
-- Simply put: If Adobe includes 300 misc files you don't need, they will mention "300 additional fonts".
-- Ignore the false claim that you are getting hundreds of extra typefaces choosing between one or the other. That is NOT TRUE.
The 11.1 version includes 300 additional files which constitute the following:
(1) Pi ornamentals, (2) Borders (both of these are not letters), (3) older PFM files
The OTF edition, which does not include extraneous files:
[Login to see the link]
The Typography Specimen Book (included if you download):
[Login to see the link]
If you prefer Font Folio 11.1, it doesn't include the nice Type-Specimen book; however, you can use the OTF-Edition book included here.
Speaking of "Official"; if the OTF edition were not "Official", I wonder who created the fancy Adobe-branded typography handbook, lol.
...
Finally -- karolus -- please stop creating esoteric issues that confuse people. This is a VERY simple topic; it doesn't need to be made confusing for others.