I can provide specific design templates and formatting settings tailored to your project.

SF features wide, open apertures. Compare the lowercase ‘a’ or ‘e’ in San Francisco to Helvetica; SF’s are more rounded and open, reducing pixel bleed on a projector. This ensures that even an audience member sitting in the back row of a 5,000-seat auditorium can read a spec sheet instantly.

Used for large text, headers, and titles. It features tighter letter-spacing (tracking) and thinner strokes to look sleek at large sizes.

like those used by Apple.

It breaks up the monotony of long, text-heavy hardware specification lists by providing a literary, high-contrast alternative. Historical Context: The Fonts That Paved the Way

: This variant is engineered for text sized 20 points and larger. It features tighter character spacing (tracking) and thinner lines, making it perfect for massive, punchy presentation slide titles.