Wogb3 j3k3: Pre-Unicode substitutions for extended characters live on

Marcel Schneider charupdate at orange.fr
Sun Oct 16 12:08:59 CDT 2016


On 11 Oct 2016 09:48:00 -0700, Doug Ewell wrote:
[…]
> 
> You mentioned mobile devices, but also mentioned ISO/IEC 9995 and 14755,
> which seem to deal primarily with computer keyboards.
> 
> On Windows, John Cowan's Moby Latin keyboard [1] allows the input of
> more than 800 non-ASCII characters, including the two mentioned in your
> post (ɛ and ɔ):
> 
> AltGr+p, o 0254 LATIN SMALL LETTER OPEN O
> AltGr+p, e 025B LATIN SMALL LETTER OPEN E
> 
> Moby Latin is a strict superset of the standard U.S. English keyboard;
> that is, none of the standard keystrokes were redefined, unlike
> keyboards such as United States-International which tend to redefine
> keys for ASCII characters that look like diacritical marks, making
> adoption difficult. There are also versions of Moby based on the
> standard U.K. keyboard.
> 
> [1]
> http://recycledknowledge.blogspot.com/2013/09/us-moby-latin-keyboard-for-windows.html
> 

U.S. Moby Latin and Whacking Latin keyboard driver packages 
are not available any more. What happened?
Neither can John Cowanʼs home pae be accessed:
http://home.ccil.org/%7Ecowan/XML/
Though the Chester County Interlink host is not down.
Still the ReadMe can be accessed, from another domain:
http://www.smo.uhi.ac.uk/gaidhlig/sracan/Whacking/MobyLatinKeyboard.html



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