I'm not too sure. I assume that if one language has a keyboard then
all of them should have. But seeing that this is Google, I have a
feeling this is the same Indic Input that they have for Desktops.
--
Regards,
Srikanth Ramakrishnan.
___
Wikimediaindi
Hi,
The latest version of Android - Jelly bean - seems to provide excellent
support for Tamil display. Support for other languages look OK but should
be tested by native speakers.
http://microblog.ravidreams.net/android-jelly-bean-support-for-tamil-and-indic-languages/
Ravi
_
I don't think it has to do something with ICS or google has implemented
this. Even before ICS, I have seen this behavior.
Most Samsung Galaxy series running Froyo or Gingerbread support Hindi
display. In these phones Hindi is displayed properly in stock Android
browser but not in Opera Mobile.
20
Android ICS does not natively support rendering of Tamil, Devanagiri
and Bengali scripts. It just supports the fonts. Rendering depends on
individual apps. This is a clever move from Google to increase the
native browser usage. They've implemented font rendering in the
stock browser; firefox still
Yes, this keyboard app works in all of these (the phone should display
Hindi properly).
2011/12/23 Srikanth Ramakrishnan
> ePandit,
> Does this work on Android Eclaire, Froyo, and Gingerbread? These
> three are used extensively in India.
>
> On 12/22/11, ePandit | ई-पण्डित wrote:
> > This is a
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 5:07 PM, sankarshan wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 11:28 AM, Ravishankar wrote:
>
>> Only few years before even PCs supported all of these and it will take more
>> years to get this in all gadgets. So, the only expectation now is to at
>> least display the characters wel
On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 11:28 AM, Ravishankar wrote:
> Only few years before even PCs supported all of these and it will take more
> years to get this in all gadgets. So, the only expectation now is to at
> least display the characters well. Input is the next priority which can be
> solved by 3rd
That would make everybody with a phone elite. Whether they have a
Nokia 1100 or Basic Music Java phone, irrespective of when they bought
it. Some people, stick to phones for years. Three, four, five too.
Difficutlt, but true.
--
Regards,
Srikanth Ramakrishnan.
Wikipedia Coimbatore Meetup on Decem
On Fri, Dec 23, 2011 at 04:15, Yuvi Panda wrote:
> +1. A lot of my classmates use Android, and they're definitely not 'elite'
Most of them would have changed the phone once in 2 years(From 1100 to
camera phone to S60s or similar to android), hence they are 'elite' and
will also upgrade their ph
ePandit,
Does this work on Android Eclaire, Froyo, and Gingerbread? These
three are used extensively in India.
On 12/22/11, ePandit | ई-पण्डित wrote:
> This is an exciting news. We were waiting for Indic languages support for
> many years. This will make possible the reach of Indic support ready
This is an exciting news. We were waiting for Indic languages support for
many years. This will make possible the reach of Indic support ready phones
and tablets to every Indian.
Text input is certainly not a problem, there are many apps which do this
perfectly. One of them is MultiLing Keyboard
+1. A lot of my classmates use Android, and they're definitely not 'elite'
On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 5:38 PM, Srikanth Ramakrishnan
wrote:
> Srikanth, Android is not like Windows, where you get the latest
> version and install. You can upgrade only if your device manufacturer
> offers one. My dads
Srikanth, Android is not like Windows, where you get the latest
version and install. You can upgrade only if your device manufacturer
offers one. My dads Dell runs on 2.1 which cannot be upgraded. My
sister uses an Optimus which runs on 2.2 and can be upgraded to 2.3.
Also, Android is no longer ELI
On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 16:23, Srikanth Ramakrishnan <
parakara.gh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Majority of India that uses Android uses v2.x
That "Majority" is elite enough to upgrade sooner IMHO.
--
Regards
Srikanth.L
___
Wikimediaindia-l mailing list
Wi
Ravi, while this is a positive sign of development, it isn't all that
great news. Majority of India that uses Android uses v2.x which lacks
support. This includes the Aakash as well.
--
Regards,
Srikanth Ramakrishnan.
Wikipedia Coimbatore Meetup on December 10th.
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Me
> I wouldn't say "supported". Language support generally includes:
>
> - display/rendering
> - input
> - keyboard layouts
> - fonts
>
Only few years before even PCs supported all of these and it will take more
years to get this in all gadgets. So, the only expectation now is to at
least display th
On Thu, Dec 22, 2011 at 9:17 AM, Ravishankar wrote:
> I did some testing on how the recently released Android ICS supports Indic
> languages.
>
> Tamil, Bengali, Marathi and Hindi are the only Indian languages supported
> for now. Oh ya, it can also show English well without a problem ;)
>
> You
Hi,
I did some testing on how the recently released Android ICS supports Indic
languages.
*Tamil, Bengali, Marathi and Hindi are the only Indian languages supported
for now*. Oh ya, it can also show English well without a problem ;)
You can view the findings in details at
http://microblog.ravid
18 matches
Mail list logo