International Characters in Windows Filenames
Yet another reason that Windows XP rocks:

I know it’s probably not a big deal to you if your operating system supports, out of the box, Chinese text input, and within five minutes of installation, will let me rename my hard drive ??. I just think it’s really cool.
This entry was posted on Sunday, October 16th, 2005 at 1:13 am and is tagged with xp rocks, chinese text, text input, five minutes, hard drive, operating system, windows xp. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback.


on October 17th, 2005 at 2:53 pm
Holy ****! Windows XP does UTF-8 just like any other OS known to man! How amazing!!! Windows XP’s innovation never seizes to amaze me.
on October 17th, 2005 at 6:11 pm
It’s still pretty, don’t you think?
on October 18th, 2005 at 5:19 am
The author thinks it’s really cool to name his hard drives with Chinese characters - just like it WAS cool to have them tattooed on your skin a decade or more ago. Oh well better late then never I guess… (roll eyes)
on October 18th, 2005 at 5:32 am
?????:???????
??????
on October 24th, 2005 at 7:08 am
The problem is how bad the implementation of Unicode in Windows.
It will happen one day you have a file name with Simpified chinese and Tradtional chinese character, as well we Japaness type chinese with Japanese words and Korean symbols…….. Windows then messed it up. So bad that you can no longer get back the file.
on November 17th, 2005 at 10:37 am
Wow yes, the prettiness can certainly make all the “crash and boot” routine much more pleasant because… heck, it’s pretty?
Umm so this is such a big thing because… Windows 2000 couldn’t do it? Cause we on this side of the front had it for a while now…
on December 4th, 2005 at 12:23 am
????????????????????????
Oddly, my dictionary (Wenlin 3.0, using John DeFrancis’ ABC Chinese-English Dictionary) has “remain poor and clean at retirement (of officials)” as an idiomatic meaning of ?? along with the more familiar meaning of “cool breeze.” I wonder what that means?