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BisharatNet
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115
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11-23-2007 10:18 AM ET (US)
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BisharatNet
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114
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11-17-2007 11:59 AM ET (US)
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BisharatNet
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113
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11-15-2007 01:45 AM ET (US)
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Edited by author 11-17-2007 11:59 AM
Re /m112, if you are looking for quality films in Hausa, you might try asking on the Finafinan_Hausa list at http://movies.groups.yahoo.com/group/Finafinan_Hausa/The H-Hausa list at http://www.h-net.org/~hausa/ is also an excellent place for general information and might provide answers. This forum, Hausa charsets and keyboards, focuses on Hausa language on computers and the internet (and mobile devices). There are some other links of possible interest in Hausa mentioned below in /m58. Hope this helps.
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| Spoomodetut
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112
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11-09-2007 05:24 AM ET (US)
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Where I can find good quality films? Can anyone help me?
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BisharatNet
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111
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11-04-2007 02:58 AM ET (US)
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BisharatNet
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110
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11-04-2007 02:56 AM ET (US)
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Hi Andrew, Belated thanks for this feedback /m109 . You raise some interesting points. In principle, as you note, getting Hausa Boko right on computers and the web is not at all complicated technically. A tool for correcting ASCII versions of Hausa would be useful. Using that for new content when users could just compose with the extended characters (the hooked letters) would be a fallback. For the latter, maybe the hurdle is the lack of a keyboard standard that is widely known and available. Don
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| Andrew C
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109
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09-27-2007 06:09 PM ET (US)
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Hi Don,
I can't comment on the feasibility, although I assume that it comes down to how many confusable words would be present in Hausa.
Such a tool if feasible would be useful for converting existing data into the standard orthography, and would allow the conversion of a large amount of material.
But I'd be reluctant to use it as a tool for creating new content.
The way I see it, such a tool would be a stop gap measure. A more important issue is the creation of standards compliant web sites and web services in Hausa (using the correct orthography).
Hausa doesn't need smart fonts, it doesn't use complex rendering like numerous African languages, and form the point of view of languages in developing countries in other parts of the world processing Hausa is simple. From the point of view of fonts and input systems, Hausa is an easy language to accommodate on computers.
The question is how do Hausa web developers move forward? And what are the currently blockages? Since the blockages to developing web pages and displaying websites in Hausa aren't technically based?
Andj.
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BisharatNet
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108
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09-18-2007 09:10 AM ET (US)
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Edited by author 09-20-2007 04:51 PM
Last year, a new language resources site began called "African Language Technology" or "AfLaT" at http://www.aflat.org/ . One of the utilities they had available was one for the Gikuyu language that would insert the tilde mark (~) over appropriate vowels (some i's and u's) in text that a user copied in or typed in - http://aflat.org/?q=node/8 I thought this could be adapted as a utility that would replace plain b, d, k (and y in Niger) with the hooked letters ɓ, ɗ, ƙ and ƴ in the appropriate places. Sort of like a spellchecker, but limited to correcting the orthography. Such a utility for Hausa could be developed for use in two ways: - Similar to the Gikuyu utility, allowing a user to plunk in a good ASCII version of a Hausa text and get the correct boko version. This could be useful for creation of documents or creating or upgrading web content or blogs in Hausa
- Also allow a user to enter the URL of a Hausa webpage (such as the blogs in /m104 or radio pages in /m107 ) and get a corrected version of the page in Hausa boko to look at. This would be very similar to what you can do at online translation sites for other languages like Systranet and Babelfish, but much simpler technically to set up.
In a way, such a utility would make expanded use of Hausa much easier, on both the user side and the content creation side. Any interest, feedback? Don Osborn Bisharat.net PanAfriL10n.org
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BisharatNet
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107
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09-18-2007 08:34 AM ET (US)
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FYI, there are 5 countries outside of Africa that have shortwave broadcasts in Hausa and webpages in Hausa concerning their broadcasts and general news: (Note that the text in all cases is in ASCII, not Hausa boko as used in Nigeria and Niger.)
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BisharatNet
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106
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08-21-2007 08:36 AM ET (US)
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BisharatNet
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105
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06-18-2007 10:10 PM ET (US)
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FYI, the Teaching and Learning with Technology site of the Pennsylvania State University has a page on "Computing With Hausa" at http://tlt.its.psu.edu/suggestions/interna...language/hausa.html(there is an error: it calls the implosive d "implosive g"; also it does not mention the Nigerian usage of 'y for the ƴ. Also, technically I think the ƙ and ƴ or 'y are "ejective" and not "implosive") Don Osborn Bisharat.net PanAfriL10n.org
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BisharatNet
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104
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05-03-2007 10:46 AM ET (US)
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Sannu, Thanks for the feedback. I meant to mention earlier that Abdalla Uba Adamu posted information about some blogs in and about Hausa on the H-Hausa list.* These are: There was a brief discussion on H-Hausa about the non-use of the hooked letters for implosive consonants (and ejective, which for specialists is I think the term for ƙ ). Don Osborn Bisharat.net PanAfriL10n.org *The H-Hausa list is at http://www.h-net.org/~hausa/
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Abdulhamid Yusuf Muhammad
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103
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05-01-2007 07:03 AM ET (US)
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Hello, (Barka da warhaka)
I realy appreciate what I came across and surely I have contributions to make.
Sai anjima
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BisharatNet
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102
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04-08-2007 12:48 PM ET (US)
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Re /m100, thank you. If there are any changes / additional information you think is necessary for the Hausa page (see /m98) or the NG-L10n page (see /m99), please let us know. Don Osborn Bisharat.net PanAfrican Localisation project
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101
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03-30-2007 02:32 PM ET (US)
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Deleted by topic administrator 04-08-2007 12:45 PM
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| Incestoss
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100
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03-21-2007 11:55 AM ET (US)
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Hi! Nice design on www.panafril10n.org, good info, thank you.
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