On Tue, Jan 15, 2019 at 1:47 PM James Kass via Unicode <unicode_at_unicode.org>
wrote:
>
> Although there probably isn't really any concerted effort to "keep
> plain-text mediocre", it can sometimes seem that way.
>
Dennis Ritchie allegedly replied to requests for new features in C with “If
you want PL/I, you know where to find it.” C is still an austere language,
and still well used, with users who want C++ or Java knowing where to find
them. If you want all the features of rich text, use rich text.
Avant-garde enthusiasts are on the leading edge by definition. That's
> why they're known as trend setters. Unicode exists because
> forward-looking people envisioned it and worked to make it happen.
> Regardless of one's perception of exuberance, Unicode turned out to be
> so much more than a fringe benefit.
>
Unicode exists because large corporations wanted to sell computers to users
around the world, and found supporting a million different character sets
was costly and buggy, and that users wanted to mix scripts in ways that a
single character set didn't support and ISO 2022 and similar solutions just
weren't cutting it.
That's a clear user story. People can use italics on computers without
problem. Twitter has chosen not to support italics on their platform, which
users have found hacky work-arounds for. That's not such a clear user
story; shouldn't Twitter add support for italics instead of changing every
system in the world?
Received on Tue Jan 15 2019 - 17:47:48 CST
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : Tue Jan 15 2019 - 17:47:48 CST