Michael Everson
Michael Everson (born
January 9,
1963) has been described by Rick McGowan, a vice president of the Unicode Consortium, as "probably the world's leading expert in the computer encoding of scripts"
[ (cached copy)] for his work to add a wide variety of
scripts and
characters to the
Universal Character Set. Since 1993, he has written over two hundred proposals
[Unicode and ISO/IEC 10646 proposals by Michael Everson] which have added thousands of characters to
ISO/IEC 10646 and
The Unicode Standard. He is a
linguist whose special area of study is the
writing systems of the world. He is a self-employed
typesetter and
font designer.
Everson was born in
Norristown,
Pennsylvania, and moved to
Tucson,
Arizona at the age of 12. His interest in the works of
J.R.R. Tolkien led him to study
Old English and then other
Germanic languages. He read
German,
Spanish, and
French for his B.A. at the
University of Arizona (1985), and the History of Religions and
Indo-European linguistics for his M.A. at the
University of California, Los Angeles (1988). In 1989, his former professor
Marija Gimbutas asked him to read a
paper on
Basque mythology at an
Indo-Europeanist Conference held in
Ireland; shortly thereafter he moved to
Dublin, where he studied as a
Fulbright Scholar in the Faculty of
Celtic Studies,
University College Dublin (1991). He was
naturalized as an Irish citizen in 2000. He currently lives in
Lecanvey, west of
Westport,
County Mayo. He is a
Buddhist.
Everson is active in supporting minority-language communities, especially in the fields of
character encoding standardization and
internationalization. In addition to being one of the primary contributing editors of the Unicode Standard, he is also a contributing editor to
ISO/IEC 10646, registrar for
ISO 15924[ISO 15924 Registration Authority], and sub-tag reviewer for RFC 3066. He has contributed to the encoding of many scripts and
characters in those standards, receiving the Unicode "Bulldog" Award in 2000
[Unicode Bulldog Award] for his technical contributions to the development and promotion of the Unicode Standard. In 2004, Everson was appointed convenor of
ISO TC46/WG3 (Conversion of Written Languages), which is responsible for
transliteration standards.
Everson has been actively involved in the encoding of many scripts in the Unicode and ISO/IEC 10646 standards, including
Balinese,
Braille,
Buginese,
Buhid,
Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics,
Carian,
Cherokee,
Coptic,
Cuneiform,
Cypriot,
Deseret,
Ethiopic,
Georgian,
Glagolitic,
Gothic,
Hanunóo,
Kayah Li,
Khmer,
Lepcha,
Limbu,
Linear B,
Lycian,
Lydian,
Mongolian,
Myanmar,
New Tai Lue,
N'Ko,
Ogham,
Ol Chiki,
Old Italic,
Old Persian,
Osmanya,
Phaistos Disc,
Phoenician,
Rejang,
Runic,
Saurashtra,
Shavian,
Sinhala,
Sundanese,
Tagalog,
Tagbanwa,
Tai Le,
Thaana,
Tibetan,
Ugaritic,
Vai, and
Yi, as well as many characters belonging to the
Latin,
Greek,
Cyrillic, and
Arabic scripts.
Together with John Cowan, he is also responsible for the
ConScript Unicode Registry, a project to coordinate the mapping of
artificial scripts into the Unicode
Private Use Area. Among the scripts "encoded" in the CSUR,
Shavian and
Deseret were eventually formally adopted into Unicode; two other conscripts under consideration are Tolkien's scripts of
Tengwar and
Cirth.
Everson has also created locale and language information for many languages, from support for the
Irish language and the other
Celtic languages to the
minority languages of
Finland[Sami locales]. In 2003 he was commissioned by the
United Nations Development Programme to prepare a report
[Computer Locale Requirements for Afghanistan] on the computer locale requirements for the major languages of
Afghanistan (
Pashto,
Dari, and
Uzbek), co-authored by Roozbeh Pournader, which was endorsed by the Ministry of Communications of the
Afghan Transitional Islamic Administration[United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific: Afghans beat language obstacle to entering digital age]. More recently,
UNESCO's Initiative B@bel
[UNESCO B@bel Initiative] funded Everson's work to encode the
N'Ko and
Balinese scripts
[Development of a Unicode standard for the West African Language N'ko].
He also has a particular interest in Gaelic
typeface design, and does a considerable amount of work
typesetting books in Irish
[Evertype: typesetting portfolio]. In 1995 he designed the
Unicode font,
Everson Mono, a
monospaced typeface with more than 4,800 characters. This font was world's third Unicode-encoded font to contain a large number of characters from many character blocks, after
Lucida Sans Unicode and
Unihan font (both 1993).
*
Evertype.com, Michael Everson's web site
*
An interview with Everson by Dick Gordon on
The Connection, a
National Public Radio public affairs call-in program
*
The Unicode Consortium