Sujet : Re: Languages on the Web - A Timeline
De : kehoea (at) *nospam* parhasard.net (Aidan Kehoe)
Groupes : sci.langDate : 26. Nov 2024, 13:14:09
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <87r06y9oq6.fsf@parhasard.net>
References : 1
User-Agent : Gnus/5.101 (Gnus v5.10.10) XEmacs/21.5-b35 (Linux-aarch64)
Ar an cúigiú lá is fiche de mí na Samhain, scríobh Ross Clark:
> The compiler of this recently posted a note about it to LinguistList.
>
>
https://marielebert.wordpress.com/2024/10/15/languages-web-timeline/ >
> Some here may find it of interest, or worth comment.
Great to put names to the founders of various sites that I have known and used
for years. I note an inaccuracy:
“January 2008:
Unicode superseded ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange)
as the main encoding system on the web.
Unicode (first published in January 1991) provides a unique number for every
character, no matter the platform, the program and the language. The 16-bit
encoding allows the processing, storage and interchange of text data in any
language, while 7-bit ASCII (first published in 1963) can only process
English, with 8-bit variants of ASCII (first published in 1986) for a few
languages with diacritics.”
By that point most of the Unicode on the web was UTF-8, which can represent
up to 1.1 million code points and did at that point represent 99,024 code
points, more than a 16-bit encoding can.
> It is, of course, mainly historical, but Wikipedia has some interesting current
> figures.
>
>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_used_on_the_InternetI’m a little surprised Chinese isn’t higher in those figures.
-- ‘As I sat looking up at the Guinness ad, I could never figure out /How your man stayed up on the surfboard after fourteen pints of stout’(C. Moore)