On 28 February 2018 at 13:22, Christoph Päper via Unicode <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> The 157 new Emoji are now available for adoption > > But Unicode 11.0 (which all new emojis but Pirate Flag and Infinity rely > upon) is not even in beta yet.
Don't even get me started on that! >> There are approximately 7,000 living human languages, >> but fewer than 100 of these languages are well-supported on computers, >> mobile phones, and other devices. Adopt-a-character donations are used >> to improve Unicode support for digitally disadvantaged languages, and to >> help preserve the world’s linguistic heritage. > > Why is the announcement mentioning those numbers of languages at all? I agree, the figures are meaningless and misleading (and intended to mislead). I could list a hundred languages that are written with the Latin script without pausing for breath. There are very very few scripts in modern daily use that are not yet encoded in the UCS, but letting out that secret will not help the Unicode Consortium to raise money from character adoption. The latest grant to Anshu from Character Adoption money is for three historic scripts (http://blog.unicode.org/2018/02/adopt-character-grant-to-support-three.html). If there were still so many digitally disadvantaged languages urgently in need of script encoding then surely the Unicode Consortium would be sponsoring those as a priority rather than historic scripts. Andrew

