But do we standardize on one variant or standardise on that?<br><br>Sorry couldn't stop myself :)<br><br><b><i>Dr Scofield <DrScofield@xyzzyxyzzy.net></i></b> wrote:<blockquote class="replbq" style="border-left: 2px solid rgb(16, 16, 255); margin-left: 5px; padding-left: 5px;"> Ryan McDougall wrote:<br>> My apologies for thread-jacking...<br>> <br>> I just want to be clear I didn't propose it because I came later and<br>> decided I didn't like UK spelling. I am Canadian and historically<br>> Canadians have used UK spelling.<br>> <br>> I proposed it for the same reason (US) English is the standard<br>> language of all things international; business, science, open source,<br>> etc: we have to pick one anyway, there will be more people unhappy<br>> with the choice than happy, so might as well just pick the most common<br>> one and suck it up.<br><br>so, to balance things a bit, if we actually do want to standardize one spelling<br>system,
i'd say, let's standardize on the UK variant then, given that that is<br>the one OpenSim was born with.<br><br><br>-- <br>dr dirk husemann ---- virtual worlds research ---- ibm zurich research lab<br>SL: dr scofield ---- drscofield@xyzzyxyzzy.net ---- http://xyzzyxyzzy.net/<br>RL: hud@zurich.ibm.com - +41 44 724 8573 - http://www.zurich.ibm.com/~hud/<br>_______________________________________________<br>Opensim-dev mailing list<br>Opensim-dev@lists.berlios.de<br>https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/opensim-dev<br></blockquote><br><p>