The history of characters in computers
Sino-Platonic Papers is pleased to announce the publication of its three-hundred-and-sixtieth issue:
“Kanji and the Computer: A Brief History of Japanese Character Set Standards,” by James Breen.
https://www.sino-platonic.org/complete/spp360_kanji_computers_japanese_character_set.pdf
ABSTRACT
This paper describes the development of the character coding systems and standards that enable Japanese text to be recorded and used in computer systems. The Japanese coding systems, which were first developed in the late 1970s, pioneered the approaches to handling the large numbers of kanji characters and established a pathway that was adopted in other standards for Asian languages. The paper covers the development of the major Japanese standards and their evolution into the Unicode character standard, which is now the basis for all language coding.
Read the rest of this entry »
Politicization of script in Taiwan
This was inevitable:
Kaohsiung university faces backlash over simplified Chinese exam:
Education ministry says faculty member's business card listing ‘Taiwan Province, China’ is ‘inappropriate’ by Charlotte Lee, Taiwan News (1/3/25)
The language is the same; it's only the script that is different — but that really matters: Think Hindi-Urdu, Serbo-Croatian, Hangul-Hanja, Maltese-Arabic.
TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — National Kaohsiung University of Science and Technology is facing controversy after a final exam in its Department of Aquaculture was in simplified Chinese, while a faculty member's business card listed “Taiwan Province, China.”
Read the rest of this entry »
Sooner than necessary
From Philip Taylor:
Just received this in an e-mail message — sender: American male, born (maybe) early to mid sixties, attended Dartmouth 1984 (or thereabouts) onwards.
Thanks Hilmar. I'll review/install soonly. -k
Seeking clarification, I asked Philip:
The man's name is Hilmar?
What's he going to review/install?
Philip replied:
Hilmar is the name of the addressee (Hilmar Preuße)— the sender was "k", a.k.a. Karl Berry. "k" is going to review "another set of patches for manual pages".
Read the rest of this entry »
Emoji has legal standing in Canadian courts
The implications of this case are enormous, so I will quote extensively from the following account, while noting there are many paragraphs with important content that I have merely mentioned or summarized. Those who are seriously interested in whether this decision constitutes compelling precedent for future jurisprudence should read the whole account. Those who are themselves responsible for making such decisions in the courts may wish to take a look at the original Case Citation: Achter Land & Cattle Ltd. v South West Terminal Ltd., 2024 SKCA 115.
"Thumbs-Up Emoji Formed Binding Sales Contract in Canada–Achter v. South West Terminal", by Eric Goldman, Technology & Marketing Law Blog (December 20, 2024)
Read the rest of this entry »
American health care in 1754
Recent events have underlined general unhappiness with aspects of the current American health care system, expressed in this recent song by Jesse Welles:
And everyone is aware of current controversies, in America and elsewhere, about immigration.
Read the rest of this entry »
AIO: brain extension
I've only been using Artificial Intelligence Overview (AIO) for about half a year. Actually, I don't really "use" it. I ask Google a question, often quite complicated but succinctly stated, and AIO jumps in and takes over my search, boiling things down to a manageable framework. As I've explained in earlier posts, AIO rapidly improved, its answers becoming increasingly relevant, organized, and, yes, I dare say, literate. It's also becoming quicker and more confident. Now it doesn't have to remind me so often that it is only "experimental".
Read the rest of this entry »
Permalink Comments off
Bugs
Voting is now open for the New Zealand Bug of the Year competition, which is an activity of the Entomological Society of New Zealand. As far as I can tell, this is the world's only BotY event, and you don't need to be in or from New Zealand to vote.
The linguistic relevance, aside from the WotY resonance, is their choice of the word "bug" rather than "insect" in the event's name. The first of their FAQs explains it this way:
Most entomologists will correct you if you try to substitute the term “bug” when describing an insect or spider. In fact, a “bug” is technically only one type of insect (insects in the Order Hemiptera have the common name of “true bugs”. They include plant bugs, stink bugs, aphids, cicadas… a few of these are nominated for 2023 NZ Bug of the Year!).
So why did we call this “Bug” of the Year instead of “Insect” of the Year? We had two reasons. (1) We wanted to use an inclusive term so that spiders, worms, and other invertebrates could be nominated for this honorable distinction. (2) “Bug of the Year” just rolls off the tongue in a way that “Insect of the Year” or “Invertebrate of the Year” never could. We assure you – those of us on the 2023 Bug Of The Year committee spent hours discussing and arguing about this, but at the end of the day, “Insect of The Year” would have satisfied the Entomologists and excluded the Arachnologists, while “Bug of the Year” just *bugs* (pun intended) the Entomologists, satisfies the Arachnologists, and the non-invertebrate specialists just learned that “bug” is a technical term that causes debate among scientists.
Read the rest of this entry »
Turtle this
You may or may not have heard of Kucha. For those who are interested in Tocharian or Uyghur, you almost certainly would be well aware of this oasis city on the northern rim of the Taklamakan Desert in the Tarim Basin of Eastern Central Asia.
Coordinates: 41°42′56″N 82°55′56″E
Kucha is the historical seat of so-called Tocharian B, i.e., Kuśiññe Kantwo, the home of the renowned Buddhist translator, Kumārajīva (344-413), and an important center of Uyghur history and culture from the 7th to 13th centuries.
Read the rest of this entry »
Reflections on Alan Lomax and Bill Labov
Below is a guest post by Corey Miller.
Alan Lomax was brought back to my mind through his appearance in this year’s holiday film A Complete Unknown, which is centered on Bob Dylan. I, a most unmusical linguist, wasn’t sure why the name rang a bell; my first thought was that he was (someone like) Milman Parry or Albert Lord, people who were interested in finding vestiges of the Homeric tradition in modern southeastern Europe. His portrait in the film is most unflattering (in contrast to the angelic Pete Seeger or a mute Woody Guthrie), culminating in a fistfight.
Read the rest of this entry »
Etymology of ramen and katsu
Nancy Friedman just published "52 interesting things I learned this year" (Fritinancy, 12/30/2024). The whole thing is worth reading, but I especially liked (10), which resonates with (17), which references LLOG.
Read the rest of this entry »
Semantic continuum
Sino-Platonic Papers is pleased to announce the publication of its three-hundred-and-fifty-ninth issue: “Lawrence Scott Davis (1951–2024),” by Lothar von Falkenhausen.
Next year E. J. Brill will publish a book by the little-known but highly accomplished Sino-anthropologist L. Scott Davis, in which he pioneers a novel, anthropological interpretation of the Chinese classics. The book demonstrates how certain motifs and images in the Yijing (Classic of Changes), the Lunyu (Confucian Analects), and the Zuo zhuan (Zuo Tradition) are strategically deployed as structuring elements so as to meld these texts into a semantic continuum. Unfortunately, the author passed away this fall without being able to see his book in print; this obituary aims to make him and his life’s work better known to the scholarly community.
Read the rest of this entry »
Emily Wilson's Odyssey
"Oh, you've never read The Odyssey???"
Your timing is perfect. Emily Wilson's translation is the best one in literally ages, has that sweet iambic pentameter to give it a "bouncy" feel, & makes dudebros cry that the classic has "gone woke". pic.twitter.com/zN5uSPTJSY
— Librarian Mama (@hyuumanatees) December 26, 2024
Read the rest of this entry »