David Starner - [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote...

> A lot of the arguments against Klingon weren't specificially against
> Klingon;

That was in WG2, I guess... The most recent discussion material that UTC saw  
is a document I wrote, which is solely about Klingon and reasons for  
rejecting it.

Fictional or invented scripts aren't in and of themselves bad candidates for  
encoding, they should just be, in general, of low priority because, pretty  
much without exception, they are "toys".  Shavian and Deseret are examples of  
scripts that needn't have been encoded now, and aren't very widely used, and  
aren't _NEEDED_ by anyone at all, but were encoded because a while back  
someone just happened to have done the work, and the proposals have just been  
sitting around gathering dust.  Might as well get them in, because nothing  
more needs to be done to the proposals.

What's "bad" is that work seems to get done on fictional scripts while there  
are still millions of real people (some of whom even have access to  
computers) who can't express texts of their natively-used languages with  
Unicode because we don't have their scripts encoded.  There are various  
reasons for that, the most common being that we can't get enough information  
about them.  The most common reason for not having enough information is that  
we can't shlep enough experts to us, nor shlep enough of us to the experts,  
to complete any encoding proposals... a matter of time and funds.

        Rick


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