The font was explicitly designed for use on a computer screen, and consequently the lines are thicker than in some other hieroglyphic fonts. It is also suitable for hieroglyphic text on paper however. A detailed list of justifications for the design of individual glyphs, including the choices of their dimensions, is forthcoming.
The code points were transposed to 0xE000 to 0xE42E, in order to accommodate software that cannot handle character codes of more than 2 bytes. This code block happens to be consistent with the EGPZ, but this is not to be interpreted as support for the latter. I disagree with both the goals of the EGPZ and with their realisation.
I do. It was created from scratch, using FontForge.
Can I use this font, and if so how?
The font is fully free for all private, academic and non-commercial use, including modification and redistribution. Acknowledgements where appropriate will of course be appreciated. If you're a company wanting to use the font for commercial purposes, please contact me first.
How do you feel about extending the font with new signs?
If there is a systematic way to do it, fine, otherwise I don't see the point. What is needed is that the Egyptological community gets organised and assigns responsible people to maintain a list of candidate signs to be added to the list from the Unicode proposal, by clear and well-founded principles, avoiding proliferation of trivial variant signs, combined signs and such lunacy. The emphasis should be on keeping the number of code points down. The motto 'the more the better' leads to unavoidable disaster.
I load the font in Word and nothing happens. Why?
What did you expect? That English text is magically translated into Ancient Egyptian? Some additional tool is needed to format hieroglyphic encoding into an image. See for example ResToImage and Res in Latex.