bonus fun fact: the same meeting notes indicate that the committee discussed a proposal (L2/16-329) for adding a Klingon script (pIqaD) to Unicode
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bonus fun fact: the same meeting notes indicate that the committee discussed a proposal (L2/16-329) for adding a Klingon script (pIqaD) to Unicode 17 comments
@SnoopJ 1980, so predates Unicode, but: https://textfiles.meulie.net/bitsaved/Books/Mackenzie_CodedCharSets.pdf @SnoopJ not exactly narrative... There's a bit of narrative history in "code": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code%3A_The_Hidden_Language_of_Computer_Hardware_and_Software @SnoopJ I would be interested too! I remember a short television documentary (Dutch TV or Netflix) showing efforts to get the trans flag and white wine emojis accepted. I think there were a few sentences about the history that got me interested, but I didn't go look for more. @SnoopJ https://avdt.vpro.nl/browse?layout=episode_timeline&layoutParam=theme&filter=%7B%22tags%22%3A%5B%22recGlcUNVMVrmDkdA%22%5D%7D&episode=recJQWTbAsMW8lReg&mode=simple is the tv programme that I was thinking of. It's in Dutch, but interviews are in English. @bencomp @SnoopJ search for ‘unicode’, or use this direct link: https://avdt.vpro.nl/browse?episode=recJQWTbAsMW8lReg @SnoopJ when the next security stuff comes out I’m now worried my snark will be in the minutes 😬 |
P.S. if you are reading this set of silly posts and know of a good "narrative history" of Unicode (or text standards in general!), I would love to read one.
I'm interested in the sort of prose you might read in the 'History' section on Wikipedia, but essay/book length. Bonus points for organizational context, i.e. going through what the Consortium is and how its sub-units are structured, how proposals work in general, etc.