Michael Everson wrote:

Expense.  Complication.  Delays while the encoding gets into the Standard
and thence into popular operating systems, with all the accoutrements
such as keyboard software.

None of those are reasons to stop encoding historic scripts.

No one is suggesting that these are reasons to stop encoding historic scripts. They may, however, be taken into account when deciding whether or not to encode an historic script that at least some people consider to be already encoded.


John Hudson

--

Tiro Typeworks        www.tiro.com
Vancouver, BC        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I often play against man, God says, but it is he who wants
  to lose, the idiot, and it is I who want him to win.
And I succeed sometimes
In making him win.
             - Charles Peguy



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