Editing 1953: The History of Unicode

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An {{w|character encoding|encoding of a character set}} is a mapping from characters to numbers.  For example, the letter "A" might be represented by the value 65.  A problem was that each script had its own character set.  Different characters could be represented by the same value.  Some languages, such as Japanese, had several inconsistent character encodings, so before people could send text, they would have to have agreed which character set to use.  {{w|Unicode}} was planned as a way of solving this by providing for a single character encoding for all the various characters used in the world's languages.   
 
An {{w|character encoding|encoding of a character set}} is a mapping from characters to numbers.  For example, the letter "A" might be represented by the value 65.  A problem was that each script had its own character set.  Different characters could be represented by the same value.  Some languages, such as Japanese, had several inconsistent character encodings, so before people could send text, they would have to have agreed which character set to use.  {{w|Unicode}} was planned as a way of solving this by providing for a single character encoding for all the various characters used in the world's languages.   
  
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Unicode is run by {{w|Unicode Consortium|a consortium}} of major technology companies and stakeholders. The founders of Unicode include {{w|Joe Becker (Unicode)|Joe Becker}}, who worked for Xerox in the 1980s.  He has a beard and may be the character featured in the first and third panels.  
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Prior to Unicode, Unicode attempts to Unicode is run by {{w|Unicode Consortium|a consortium}} of major technology companies and stakeholders. The founders of Unicode include {{w|Joe Becker (Unicode)|Joe Becker}}, who worked for Xerox in the 1980s.  He has a beard and may be the character featured in the first and third panels.  
  
 
New characters have continued to be added to Unicode, and recently many "{{w|emoji}}" (picture characters) have been added.  Emoji were originally added to be compatible with text message encodings in Japan, but after devices in other countries started supporting them as part of Unicode, they caught on worldwide.  Now emoji characters are added for their own sake, not just for compatibility.
 
New characters have continued to be added to Unicode, and recently many "{{w|emoji}}" (picture characters) have been added.  Emoji were originally added to be compatible with text message encodings in Japan, but after devices in other countries started supporting them as part of Unicode, they caught on worldwide.  Now emoji characters are added for their own sake, not just for compatibility.

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