Thank you for the suggestions, Mark. My deadline to submit a draft is months away, so I have time to receive more suggestions.

       —Jim DeLaHunt, software engineer, Vancouver Canada

On 2020-04-27 17:09, Mark Datysgeld wrote:

Sorry for the delayed response.

Things I always include in my presentations are concept that are more specific to us than other industry players. One example is A-Labels vs. U-Labels and the challenges around punycode. Talking about the early embracing of IDNs by ccTLDs is also relevant. Recent documents such as UASG025 and 026 also offer a lot of data that can be formatted to your presentation.

Best,

On 04/14/2020 02:12, Jim DeLaHunt wrote:

UA Colleagues:

My (other) proposal was accepted, and I will be doing a tutorial on Universal Acceptance for the 44th Internationalisation and Unicode Conference, on October 14–16, 2020. I would appreciate suggestions from any of you about what UA topics are effective with this kind of audience. If you have slides or demo scripts which I can re-use, that is even better.

Here is what I know about what the Conference expects from me:

Audience: small, likely 10-40 people in this tutorial, maybe 200-300 people total in the conference. But they are a top-class group of experts in internationalisation, localisation, fonts, and language. Attendees include the architects and implementers of language support from major (US) tech companies like Apple, Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Netflix, as well as expert academics. Some may have designed the specs for IDNs and EAI. They might not know the term "Universal Acceptance" yet (though once we are successful in our UASG efforts, they all will). But once they know the term, they will be 100% in favour. We don't need to spend much effort persuading them.

Purpose: the tutorials are longer sessions on the first day of the conference. They are intended to take someone who knows the general subject of internationalisation and Unicode, and give them enough background and explanation that they can understand the cutting-edge topics in the remaining conference sessions.

Time: 90 minutes.

Format: usually a lecture in a meeting room, with no webcast and no remote participation. Slides projected onto a screen. Most participants will have their own laptops and be comfortable using them, so a participation exercise would be a great way to wake everyone up. However, given the COVID-19 pandemic, it is possible the whole conference will shift to video participation from home. Or it might be cancelled altogether. It's really hard to predict.

Possible Topics

Obviously this is way more content than I can fit into 90 minutes. I will need to cut out topics to fit my time. But right now, i am looking for other topics which work well in a tutorial setting, and material which I can re-use.

Please send any suggestions to me, on or off the list.

I will, of course, be glad to contribute these presentations back to the UASG for re-use. It might be possible to take a video of this tutorial, if the Conference allows it. Then I'd be happy for that to get added to the UASG library also.

Best regards,
       —Jim DeLaHunt, Vancouver, Canada

-- 
    --Jim DeLaHunt, jdlh@jdlh.com     http://blog.jdlh.com/ (http://jdlh.com/)
      multilingual websites consultant

      355-1027 Davie St, Vancouver BC V6E 4L2, Canada
         Canada mobile +1-604-376-8953

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-- 
Mark W. Datysgeld from Governance Primer [www.markwd.website]
In partnership with AR-TARC and the Brazilian Association of Software Companies (ABES)
-- 
    --Jim DeLaHunt, jdlh@jdlh.com     http://blog.jdlh.com/ (http://jdlh.com/)
      multilingual websites consultant

      355-1027 Davie St, Vancouver BC V6E 4L2, Canada
         Canada mobile +1-604-376-8953