Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Unicode Keyboards - Win7 Install tutorials

Step 1 - Extract Keyboard from Zip Archive

Extracting the desired keyboards from the zip archive is the first step. Even if you know all about unzipping files, you may want to view this tutorial. It contains important information about the different Dene Language keyboards within the archive.




Step 2 - Install Desired Language Keyboard

Installing the selected keyboards is simple - open the folder and run the setup file. You need to do this for each language you wish to use. This tutorial shows what dialog windows open during the process, and informs you that there is a silent period when nothing seems to happen.




Step 3 - Activate Keyboard from Language Bar

This tutorial shows how to use the language bar to switch the Unicode Dene Languages keyboards on and off. You need to implement the keyboard for each application where you wish to use it. Your choice persists for that application as long as it is open. If you open a new application, you will need to select a keyboard for that application if you want something other than your windows default.




Step 4 - More Language Bar (Optional)

This optional tutorial shows how to use the Languages control panel to add keyboards to your language bar if they do not automatically show up there. Probably not needed, but just in case, this details how to select them from the control panel.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Unicode Keyboard install for XP

I've just posted a tutorial on youtube showing how to extract and install the unicode Dene keyboards, and how to configure the language toolbar on Win XP. The control panel procedure is slightly different for Vista and Win 7. Hope to have those up before new year.

Keyboards are not yet available for download. Leave a comment asking for a copy by email. I won't publish your comment, but will send you the most recent set of Dene Language Unicode keyboards.

Remember, XP users will need to download the LanguageGeek fonts. Your XP system fonts do not contain all the unicode characters required for the Dene languages.


Saturday, July 24, 2010

Summertime Blues

No news. Development and documentation are on hold for the summer.

Just letting anyone still listening know that some people are successfully using the new keyboards with Unicode fonts for NWT Dene Languages. Users are identifying software which has difficulty interpreting the combined nasal and tone markers.

Offer still stands to email new keyboards to anyone wanting to try them. Comment on this blog if that's you.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Testing...

We have Windows keyboards!
-mostly undocumented, not linked to a website yet, but available for installing and use if you understand your control panel's language settings. Email me if you feel brave. The keyboard programs are completely free, thanks to Chris Harvey, the languagegeek. We tested on a range of machines at our display at the Languages Symposium in Yellowknife last week. A handful of people brought their computers to have the keyboards installed and more brought flash drives to take the files home.

No Keyboard? Not a problem. Just navigate to Dene Languages Literacy and type some Dene language text into the window. Then Copy and Paste to your email, document or text chat. The default is the Vowel-first WinMac layout for all languages, but you can experiment with non-WinMac layouts specific to your languages. Just pay attention to where the tones and nasals are.

DeneFonts are not about fonts anymore. Vista and Windows 7 owners can use the fonts installed from the factory for Dene Languages if they have the right keyboard. (Windows XP users will need to download a Unicode font from the languagegeek to get all the characters, and some web applications may not let them choose that font.)

Mac users - Sorry, I still haven't tested the latest Mac fonts but expect they will comply as well. Chris says he has the Mac keyboards nearly ready.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Workshop Outcomes

In spite of my optimism in the last posting, there are no new Dene Unicode downloads to announce yet. The Workshop participants drew to our attention some important changes that required revisions in keyboard layouts and encoding.

Windows Vista and Windows 7 will let us realize our dream of using system fonts like Times New Roman and Arial to type Dene Languages in word procesors, email, and instant messaging - as long as the recipient is using the same operating system. Windows XP fonts do not have all the characters needed. I don't have data on Mac system fonts yet. Even under Vista, several programs, including Power Point 2007 and Movie Maker, misplace or lose diacritics. Apparently they do not support Open Type, the engine which assures proper positioning of tone and nasal markers with Unicode fonts.

What should you do? Try out Unicode as soon as Dene language keyboards become available. They will be free. Legacy WinMac Dene Fonts are completely unreadable if sender and receiver do not both have the fonts installed. At the worst, Unicode incompatibility is moderately annoying.

We plan to have a table at the Minister's Aboriginal Languages Symposium in Yellowknife March 30 to April 1 with (I hope) the latest keyboards and information available to the public.

In the meantime, check out these websites from Mike West.
http://www.nwtlanguages.ca/alphabet/
http://www.nwtlanguages.ca/tendi/
http://www.nwtlanguages.ca/literacy/

And here's a web keyboard to try.
You can type in several Dene Languages without installing a special keyboard on your computer.
http://www.nwtlanguages.ca/literacy/resources.aspx

Click the language name to display a visual keyboard image. It will show you which keys to use to type special Dene Language characters. This is very useful when using someone else's machine where you cannot install a keyboard program. Type here, then copy and paste your text wherever you need it.

I believe Mike is planning to add a WinMac-style Unicode keyboard for those users who have trained themselves to touch type on that system.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Meeting in Progress

The Unicode Dene Font tech team had a productive day in Yellowknife Feb 27. We are identifying work-arounds needed for older operating systems which are not fully compatible. We identified programs which work well with Unicode and some which still have problems. New keyboards, cosmetic improvements to character display, and language specific alphabetical sorting are in the works as a result of input from the guests which came to the first day's workshop. Three more days of workshops and trials remain.

Stay tuned for more developments and an announcement when a download package will be available.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Hopeful progress

Two days ago I began a post "While we wait for word on a funding proposal we are not idle." Before I could publish it I got the word - a portion of the funding was approved. Less than half, but enough that the tech team is planning a face to face meeting to bring together and document all the known glitches in our prototype. We have each been testing the performance in a variety of fonts, applications and operating systems. The permutations are finite, but dauntingly numerous. The unpredictability of how formatted email is received is one of our current challenges. Another challenge is deciding the degree to which we will support older, less Unicode-compliant operating systems and software.

The good news, we just may have a Unicode Dene keyboard ready for beta testing by the end of March. Keep watching. This is one of the places we'll advertise for testers.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Reflection

Thanks to fellow team members who encouraged me to continue this blog. I think I've got comments enabled now. Feel free to ask questions as well - I may not have an answer but it will provoke discussion.

Back in 1994-95 when I struggled through developing the WinMac Dene Fonts, the only resources I had were people I could meet in person or by phone, and printed manuals and catalogs. Trial and error required a lot of sneaker-net and snail-mailing floppy disks to colleagues. I remember getting long distance dial-up in 1996 and discovering the awesome power of email collaboration.

Working with others on Unicode for Dene Languages has already saved me re-inventing the wheel enough times in this last week to equip a Bombardier. What a privilege to be part of this round!

Monday, January 18, 2010

Starting Again

15 years after WinMac DeneFonts, a better system is on the horizon. Two weeks ago I started programming a new keyboard to take advantage of the Unicode fonts.

Did you know it's now possible to compose Dene Language documents in Arial, Times New Roman, and several other fonts? Yes, the versions of those fonts on my Vista machine have all the characters needed. Soon there will be no more need to download fonts just to read and print Dene Language documents. No more "Tåîchô" when you wrote "Tlicho" with all the diacritics.

So I was writing this new keyboard file to type the special characters and could see that it was going to work, when I ran into a snag. I called around to consult with some Dene Language experts and found out there was a group of people who had the same idea at about the same time I did. Now a bunch of us are working together maximize the improvements in the way Dene Languages will be typed, emailed, and displayed on the internet. Most of them know way more than I do. That snag? - solved with one email. But working together as a group of perfectionists we found a lot of other issues to resolve before we have anything to publish.

Stay tuned for updates - we're just getting started.