Globalization
- 41
- Kural Tamil Software
- Keyboard manager that helps to input Tamil characters in Microsoft Windows applications. Package includes Kavithai Tamil/English word processor with spell checker, Paravai SMTP based email client, encoding/font converters and Osai - Tamil text to speech engine.
- 45
- Opentag.com
- Dedicated to the information and the promotion of the OpenTag format as well as other utilities for localization and translation tasks.
- 47
- i18n.ca: Internationalization Training & Consulting
- Offers full-day and half-day internationalization and localization workshops.
- 48
- Introduction to Software Localization (L10N) and Internationalization (I18N)
- This page is a signpost. It shows you the many roads leading to knowledge of localization.
- 51
- Wikipedia - ISO-8859
- A detailed description of the encodings in the ISO-Standard including character tables and differences between the encodings contained.
- 52
- Unicode and Multilingual Support in Web Browsers and HTML
- A guide to displaying thousands of foreign and special characters in Web pages, with the aid of Unicode, plus notes on suitable multilingual browsers, fonts, editors and other utilities. Includes lists of the characters in each Unicode range that can be used to test browsers and fonts.
- 53
- Characters vs. Bytes
- Tim Bray, co-editor of the XML standard, discusses various Unicode encodings and their pros and cons.
- 54
- Decimal, Hexadecimal Character Codes in HTML Unicode
- An online tool for converting between multinational characters and their decimal and hexadecimal equivalents.
- 55
- Fontboard
- Multilingual fonts and keyboard layouts for Unicode-compliant and pre-Unicode applications. Also contains information on CJK, Maltese, Esperanto, Arabic, Cyrillic and Hebrew and links to related resources.
- 56
- Gallery of Unicode Fonts
- A gallery that displays samples of available Unicode fonts for dozens of different writing systems.
- 57
- Hello World or Καλημέρα κόσμε or こんにちは 世界
- Paper by Bell Labs researchers Rob Pike and Ken Thompson explaining how they used UTF-8 to make Plan 9 the first operating system with Unicode support.