And FWIW the US has only continued in the grand old tradition of the British Empire -- bon gr�s, mal gr�s (or should that be grey, or gray, or grai?).
Unfortunately until we are all functioning with a minimum of UNIX codes and 128bits the problem will continue to probably exist.
Gregory
On Fri, 13 May 2005 02:43:42 -0400, shirling & neueweise <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hey hiro, what do you mean by "the file names are broken", they don't appear properly, non-ascii characters are replaced by others? did you zip the finale files before sending, or just send them as straight finale files?
i know you can register websites in germany with addresses which include extended characters, why the &*?% can't we exchange files using "extended characters" (a fairly colonial / anglo-centric term in any case...) today!? perhaps it would have been understandable 10 years ago... lovely. the american standard code for information interchange controls the effectiveness of international exchanges.
ack.
From: "A-NO-NE Music"Sorry. Not OK. I just tried it for you, with my OSX to Win2K, file names with these non ASCII are all broken.
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