On 2019-07-03 18:13:20 -0500, Igor Korot wrote: > But as I said, imaging the following situation: > > You are somewhere in Germany and you have a German version of OS > (any OS) > . > You also have a German keyboard (hardware) with German keys. > > Now you are assigned to go to some international events where people > all over the world will be coming to your presentation and they will be > registering on you machine > > Also imagine that the company policy prohibits you from modifying the > system settings. > > My solution: > I would probably grab a lot of registering paper and ask people to enter > English transliteration of the names on the machine so when you come > back to the office you can properly enter their names using all those > different keyboards (maybe virtual ones) to associate them with > their English counterparts. > > Just curious - what would you do?
I would set up a web registration form, so people can use their own
device (phone, laptop, whatever) to enter their name. Presumably they
know how to enter their name on their device. I definitely don't know
how to enter a hand-written (or even printed) Chinese name on any
keyboard (I managed to do that recently, but that was a lot of work and
way into "a fun challenge to do once, not something I want to repeat"
territory).
hp
--
_ | Peter J. Holzer | we build much bigger, better disasters now
|_|_) | | because we have much more sophisticated
| | | [email protected] | management tools.
__/ | http://www.hjp.at/ | -- Ross Anderson <https://www.edge.org/>
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