> On 11 Jul 2015, at 18:36, Johannes Bergerhausen <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> As I said at TEDx in Vienna:
> [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRdupNXpm8k]

The keyboards for different languages are essentially the same nowadays: it 
sends a code indicating which button is acted on and whether it is depressed or 
released. The computer then translates using a key map. So for a Cherokee 
keyboard, as discussed in the video, one would need different images on the 
keys if one bothers, and a key map.

One problem here is that is that it is very time consuming to design such key 
maps. This is another shortcoming of Unicode usage: lack of input methods, in 
addition to the font issue.



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