- From: Daniel Dardailler <danield@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 29 Oct 2007 21:22:55 +0100
- To: Jonathan Rosenne <rosennej@qsm.co.il>
- Cc: 'WWW International' <www-international@w3.org>, 'W3C Offices' <w3c-office-pr@w3.org>, public-i18n-core@w3.org
>>>> Did you mean: "They do not help the users who do NOT know English >> and >>>> do not know the Latin letters."? >>> Yes, of course. >> I disagree, they do help, but not as much as a full IDN system does, >> not as much >> as a full Unicode system does. >> >> If I am Greek and I register my name in Greek as NAME.com or NAME.gr or >> another >> TLD, I know that people can type it in Greek as NAME in the URL bar >> without any >> "http://www." before and ".com/" or ".gr" after, since most browsers do >> the >> completion and the wildcarding in the application, and that counts, >> this is not >> "nothing". http is not planned to disappear afaik. > > Let's think about Arabic of Chinese, or Hebrew. Greek is different, > obviously. There's no browser URL completion in those languages ?
Received on Monday, 29 October 2007 20:23:14 UTC