Re: Products supporting Unicode

From: Aki Inoue (aki@apple.com)
Date: Mon Sep 27 1999 - 14:30:44 EDT


Apple's MacOS X Server & forthcoming MacOS X supports Unicode.

Aki

----- Original Message -----
From: Mark E. Davis <markdavis@ispchannel.com>
To: Unicode List <unicode@unicode.org>
Sent: Monday, September 27, 1999 1:52 AM
Subject: Re: Products supporting Unicode

> Below is my current compiled list, not yet worded into a paragraph.
>
> Anyone have any status on products from the following:
>
> Booz, Allen, & Hamilton, Inc.
> Hewlett-Packard Company
> Justsystem Corporation
> Reuters, Ltd.
> SAP AG
> Unisys Corporation
>
> or any others that are missing, or corrections to the list:
>
> Mark
>
> -------------
> Unicode-enabled (fully or partially; in alphabetical order):
>
> Apple MacOS 9.0 (forthcoming),
> Basis Rosette
> Compaq's Tru64 UNIX
> IBM AIX,
> IBM Classes for Unicode (now open source)
> IBM DB2,
> Java,
> JavaScript,
> Kermit (forthcoming versions),
> Lotus Domino,
> Lotus Notes,
> Many Monotype fonts
> Microsoft Internet Explorer,
> Microsoft Office 2000,
> Microsoft SQL Server,
> Microsoft Windows 2000 (forthcoming),
> Microsoft Windows CE,
> Microsoft Windows NT,
> NCR Teradata,
> Netscape Navigator,
> Novell NetWare Directory Services,
> Open Market Transact,
> Oracle Oracle8i,
> Palm OS,
> Perl 5.005 (improved in 5.6)
> SIL Encore Font Package 3.0
> Sun Solaris,
> Sybase Adaptive Server Anywhere,
> Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise,
> Sybase PowerBuilder,
> Sybase Unicode Developer's Kit
> Symbian EPOC (for mobile ROM-based devices),
> Tcl
> Tk
>
> Other notes:
> - TrueType font specifications support Unicode (including OpenType and
Apple
> Advanced Typography)
> - Most recent commercial fonts have Unicode character-glyph maps
> - Unicode is required by the new technologies coming from the W3C, IETF,
and
> OMG; including XML, XHTML, XSL, LDAP, CORBA 3.0, etc.
>
>
>



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