Han Unification: not violent, just really inconvenient
Han Unification: not violent, just really inconvenient
@0xabad1dea may this still hold true years from now
@0xabad1dea Those are some very white faces for representing a group of people making decisions about how to best map chinese, japanese and korean characters.
@Owlor just to be 100% clear, this isn't literally the meeting where it happened a few decades ago, just the first photo I found of a Unicode meeting where there's a sign saying it's a Unicode meeting.
I don't know who was involved in the decision, though there's probably a record somewhere.
@0xabad1dea A lot of the CJK work is on the ISO side, see https://www.unicode.org/irg/.
On the UTC side, see the relevant WG https://www.unicode.org/consortium/cjkunihan.html.
On the history see https://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode17.0.0/core-spec/appendix-e/.
Eiso Chan (now CJK group vice chair) had a interesting thread on Twitter on the necessity of unification, see https://web.archive.org/web/20220115002546/https://twitter.com/FakeUnicode/status/1455676926568271873. See also https://www.unicode.org/notes/tn26/.