Joe Becker (Unicode) Explained

Joe Becker
Birth Name:Joseph D. Becker
Nationality:American
Occupation:Technical Vice President
Years Active:1980s-present
Known For:Co-founder of Unicode Consortium

Joseph D. Becker is an American computer scientist and one of the co-founders of the Unicode project, and a Technical Vice President Emeritus of the Unicode Consortium. He has worked on artificial intelligence at BBN and multilingual workstation software at Xerox.

Becker has long been involved in the issues of multilingual computing in general and Unicode in particular. His 1984 paper in Scientific American, "Multilingual Word Processing",[1] was a seminal work on some of the problems involved, including the need to distinguish characters and glyphs.[2] Following the release of the paper in 1987, he and two others began investigations into the practicality of creating a universal character set. Becker teamed up with his colleague Lee Collins who worked alongside him at Xerox and Mark Davis of Apple.[3] [4] It was Becker who coined the word "Unicode" to cover the project.[5] His article Unicode 88, contained the first public summary of the principles originally underlying the Unicode standard.

Notes and References

  1. Multilingual Word Processing . Scientific American. 24969416 . d. Becker . Joseph . 1984 . 251 . 1 . 96–107 . 10.1038/scientificamerican0784-96 . 1984SciAm.251a..96B .
  2. Book: Using Computers in Linguistics: A Practical Guide. Helen Aristar Dry. John Lawler. 978-0415167932. The Nature of Linguistic Data and the Requirements of a Computing Environment for Linguistic Research. http://www.sil.org/computing/routledge/simons/multilingual.html. Gary F. Simons. 1998. registration.
  3. Book: Scott Gardner. The Definitive Guide to Pylons. 25 January 2009. Apress. 978-1-4302-0534-0. 218 . The origins of Unicode date back to 1987 when Joe Becker, Lee Collins, and Mark Davis started investigating the practicalities of creating a universal character set..
  4. Web site: Summary. History of Unicode.
  5. Web site: Early Years of Unicode. History of Unicode.