Here you go:

 

I have support for a large variety of character sets, so I just entered that
into MS PhotoDraw and copied it here.

I can receive email using any of the supported alphabets, but there's no
guarantee that recipients of my own messages have installed such support.

Bill 
  _____  

Bill Potts
W <http://wfpconsulting.com/> FP Consulting
Roseville, CA
 <http://metric1.org/> http://metric1.org [SI Navigator] 



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [ <mailto:[email protected]>
mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James R. Frysinger
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 19:03
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:43977] Re: SI symbol alternatives


Yes, that was labeled in Cyrillic. We fuss here sometimes about the
inconvenience of having to deal with the symbols for micro and ohm not
being in our alphabet. That and the problem of inserting the raised
circle for degree using our keyboards has occupied too much space
already on this mail list.

Now, consider someone using a Cyrillic keyboard. Virtually all of the SI
symbols cannot be entered from that keyboard.

So, especially for domestic use, it's not surprising to find that they
used Cyrillic symbols instead. In lowercase that would be ?? and in
uppercase that would be ??. In case those characters don't come through
on your screen looking the way I typed them, that's "em" (looks like the
English m or M) and "ge" (looks like a small or large upside down
English "L").

I really DO have to get hot and re-post my "SI in xxxx" (foreign
language) pages. Rest assured that Russians still know what the
international symbols are, even if they cannot write them using their
keyboards.

Jim



Paul Trusten, R.Ph. wrote:
> Today,I was presented with some prescription drug products marked in the
> Cyrillic alphabet from someone who had been to that part of the world
(Russia,
> etc.). On this packaging, the symbol for "milligram" was NOT "mg," but two
> characters, one of which looked like an "m" while the second one looked a
> little bit like an uppercase Greek letter "delta." I was shocked; I even
> remember SI symbols remaining the same in pictographic languages, so this
is
> the first time I have seen the SI symbol abandoned for something else.
Could
> this just be a violation of the symbol rule, as we often see? That is,
these
> folks refused to use the letter "g" in the symbol?
>
> These markings were on manufacturers' labeling. They were not pharmacy
labels,
> which are notorious for breaking with SI symbolism (in these, "gram" is
> abbreviated "GM" rather than being correctly symbolized by "g")
> --
>
>
>
> Paul Trusten, R.Ph.
> Public Relations Director
> U.S. Metric Association (USMA), Inc.
> www.metric.org
> 3609 Caldera Boulevard, Apartment 122
> Midland TX 79707-2872 US
> +1(432)528-7724
>  <mailto:[email protected]> mailto:[email protected]
>
>
>
>

--
James R. Frysinger
632 Stony Point Mountain Road
Doyle, TN 38559-3030

(C) 931.212.0267
(H) 931.657.3107
(F) 931.657.3108


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