FS
They are about to release MSLU to help developers write Unicode applications
that will run on all platforms, rather than forcing them to produce
"NT-only" versions or just sticking with ANSI.
Microsoft itself is very actively involved with Unicode.
So their future support story? That they keep moving forward, and that they
do have Unicode in the future.
--
MichKa
the only book on internationalization in VB at
http://www.i18nWithVB.com/
"Frank Snow" <fs...@fsnow.com> wrote in message
news:9b72e465.01060...@posting.google.com...
Ted.
"Michael (michka) Kaplan" <forme...@spamfree.trigeminal.nospam.com> wrote
in message news:#vbBuge7AHA.1416@tkmsftngp05...
http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/Articles/mslu_announce.asp
It will be out with the next Platform SDK.
--
MichKa
the only book on internationalization in VB at
http://www.i18nWithVB.com/
"Ted" <Ted@t_x.org> wrote in message news:O9gsBPe9AHA.1900@tkmsftngp04...
Ted.
"Michael (michka) Kaplan" <forme...@spamfree.trigeminal.nospam.com> wrote
in message news:#dA#IIf9AHA.2116@tkmsftngp02...
But in another sense, Whistler (well, Windows XP is the name now) is the
first version of the NT code base that is actually aimed at getting
non-business customers to migrate off of Win9x, and the best way to move
people is to have developers writing Unicode applications. In the real
world, that can never happen if people have to support Win9x... thus we are
here!
For more info or for questions, etc., you can go to the following newsgroup
(on the msnews.microsoft.com server):
microsoft.public.platformsdk.mslayerforunicode
--
MichKa
Michael Kaplan
Trigeminal Software, Inc.
http://www.trigeminal.com/
"Ted" <Ted@t_x.org> wrote in message news:ewyaPTo9AHA.1896@tkmsftngp05...