On Sat, Jul 11, 2015, at 20:54, Hans Aberg  wrote:

> 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 it is very time consuming to design such key 
> maps. 

On Wen, Jul 15, 2015, at 16:07, Hans Aberg  wrote:

> > On 15 Jul 2015, at 11:06, Marcel Schneider  wrote:
> 
> > Editing keyboard layouts is a job anybody can tackle who is willing to 
> > spend some time for a useful work (as opposed to a set of leisures like 
> > gaming, chasing and the like). 
> 
> In mathematics, there are a couple of thousands of characters, including 
> Latin and Greek styles, which would take some time to develop a key map for.

That is of course a hard piece of work. For mathematical symbols, rather than a 
keymap, I'd prefer a Compose tree.

For natural languages like Cherokee, Spanish, Welsh, English, or all languages 
together that use a given script, like Cyrillic, Greek, or Latin, developing 
keymaps is a very grateful job, regardless of the time we finally spend on, 
because the results will be useful to many people—at the condition that the 
results are good. Now, the better a keymap, the more it's likely to need time 
and personal investment (that is, we need to spend supplemental thinking time, 
additionally to the worktime). Obviously we can't rely on Apple, Google and 
Microsoft for doing this job, they simply *cannot* afford to spend so much 
time, which in this case is money, to develop absolutely free products that 
will never pay back all that money. 

By "pay back all that money" I mean that e.g. Microsoft would sell more Windows 
licenses for the sake of all the ultra-performative keyboard layouts the OS 
will be shipped with. I don't believe that things could happen this way. First, 
Windows will now be distributed as a free update; second, OEMs *cannot* afford 
neither to raise computer prices for the sake of keyboard layouts; third, these 
keyboard drivers are so transparent by nature that de facto they're open 
source; fourth, the goal being that *everybody* come into the benefit of those 
keyboard layouts, they *must* be shared for free; and last but not least, a 
keyboard driver is not a good spot to place ads.

This is why *everybody* is invited to tackle this job. The idea is that when we 
concede to do some good with our personal time (as opposed to gaming or 
chasing, which are just two examples of time consuming activities that 
personally I consider as doing no good), then time will stop to be in the 
foreground when talking about key maps and Compose trees.

Best,

Marcel

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