Shriramana Sharma wrote :
>Look -- Unicode is an international standard. English is the 
>international language of science and technology, whether you like it or 
>not. And as Michael Everson as pointed out, the script is more commonly 
>known in the English language as the Bengali script
……………..
>And the reasons for the script to be better known as the Bengali script 
>rather than Assamese are obvious. As per records  Bengali 
>is the *fifth* most widely spoken language in the world with a speaker 
>population of 181 million (closely following Hindi with 182). Assamese 
>is at place *fifty-four* with speaker population of 16.8 million, less 
>than *one-tenth* of that of Bengali. It is even behind Chattisgarhi 
>language with 17.5 million speakers, and the separate state of 
>Chattisgarh was only even formed recently. Given this, you should not 
>expect special treatment for the name "Assamese". 
##  Well  I was definitely expecting such an argument and that came from a 
compatriot and before anyone or at least I could say anything and put him/her 
in checkmate, he/she him/herself wrote:
>It is but natural that in the absence of a pre-agreed name for a script for 
>other 
>reasons (such as the Latin script), a script is better internationally 
>recognized by the language that it is more (in terms of sheer volume) 
>used for.
## I think s/he has given and finished her/his his point about why the name of 
the script is chosen as “Bengali” …..  The English knew “Calcutta”  as such,,,, 
 why have you changed it to “Kolkata” ? Well irrelevant from the point of  view 
of encoding characters but my compatriot should understand that 
“Standardization” is not something about what the English thinks or says . So 
far as science and technology is concerned the English (British) standards are 
already obsolete.    
Philippe Verdy wrote:
>But Mr Delex must understand that the UCS (by Unicode or ISO/IEC 
>10646) does NOT encode language-specific alphabets, but "unified" 
>scripts that share a lot of common letters and a common structure is 
>such a way that those languages can be freeely mixed and interchanged 
>without duplicating the letters.
## Was it really necessary for Unicode to give so many Hexcodes to “Zero” which 
looks same and in fact same in almost all the South-East Asian scripts (also in 
Latin , I guess ) ? Is it such that unicode is planning “Devanagari three – 
Devanagari three = Devanagari Zero” or “Bengali three – Bengali three = Bengali 
zero”  ?? 
>But what he really wants is to avoid being exposed to these "Bengali" names. 
>This is not a matter 
>of tehcnical encoding, but more a question of localisation (for 
>example when using a character picker application, or when searching 
>character collections by names).
## Definitely!! How can a native Assamese/software developer tolerate when he 
is being taught by Unicode through its well researched descriptions about the 
characters 09F0 and 09F1 as  Bengali letter this and this ?
> I may give some excuses to him, if he is not aware of the technical 
> justification of why names are immutables ….
## “Immutables” …. “Can’t be changed any way” …….. “ .. UCS cannot, and will 
not ever, be changed”  …. When something done can’t be undone we should think 
100 times before doing that and even then should keep a way for undoing. If 
09F0 and 09F1 is done to be described as Bengali letters , I will say hundred, 
thousand well every time that Unicode is wrong , both in its effort and essence 
of what has come out of it. If there is no Ctrl+Alt+Del , such standards, 
applications or whatever should outright be rejected ,blocked and quarantined. 


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