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P.S. I can't talk for the japanese. But I coworked for years with Ukranians. They have special keyboards to type both Cyrillic and western characters, those were the standard computer keyboards, according to them.
They told me they have to make special efforts to type Cyrillic. The keyword default function was for typing western characters.
I remember when I asked a guy to type "Kasparov" in Cyrillic by Yahoo chat, and that's how he told me how the thing worked.
How is that in Japan? China? I know there are something like 500 "drawings" they use in common language in a day. How does that look in the keyboard?
I bet they need several strokes to type one of their native characters, even in a keyboard prepared for that, just like my Ukrainians fellows.
So, what is easier and shorter, ã¢ãã«ã.jp or adult.jp?
I don't know that, but I've been always curious. Since you're in Japan, I guess I will finally know.
Well, for the Japanese and Chinese they use querty keyboards mostly. Its a bit difficult to explain well - we set a mode and type in a-da-ru-to and press enter and voila! it is ã¢ãã«ã. No big deal. Remember that knowing the alphabet and knowing how to spell english are completely different things. One takes about 2 weeks of memorization, the other takes many years of education and constant use.
If people doubt that the Japanese can type Japanese efficiently with a querty keyboard ask yourself this - how come when you go to a Japanese website it is all in Japanese and not English? when you go to a Japanese convenience store - how come the magazines are all in Japanese and not English? The answer is because the Japanese easily type in Japanese using a querty keyboard.
Thanks for your explaination fischermx, it's very useful to know. I'm surprised though that so many people in latin america are unable to type accents for their books, magazines, websites and now don't use them - all because of the availability of a keyboard. It's fascinating how technology can change culture.
Apparently, latin IDN type-ins are doing very well. Russian IDNs get great cyrillic type-in traffic too. With your language skills, you should check them out. IDN .es should get announced soon I think!