The transmission of non-ASCII character sets presents a special challenge to electronic mail systems. The Japanese language can be represented by several different encoding standards, which make the conveyance of Japanese language information more complicated than it's European or ASCII counterparts. This document provides an introduction to the technical issues behind the encoding of Japanese language data, and how it relates to Internet electronic mail. The solution provided by Internet Exchange is also discussed.
Related white papers
Effectiveness of Web-Translators
Despite the vast research done and technologies built to translate from one language to another, general public is unaware of such technologies. In this paper the three types of practices...
TechNet Webcast: 24 Hours of Windows Server 2008 (Part 08 of 24): IIS 7.0 Advanced Management (Level 200)
The presenter of this webcast examines Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) 7.0 and specifically addresses advanced automation and management features. First, the presenter looks at command-line management, and task automation...
CA ESP Workload Automation Software: Measuring Business Impact and ROI
In May 2006, CA acquired Cybermation to enhance current product strategy and provide a foundation for the next generation of CA's job management software products referred to as "Workload automation"....
MSDN Architecture Webcast: Architecture: Automating Software Development Testing (Level 200)
The presenter of this webcast explains about the implementation of architecture testing that takes place at the design phase of the software creation process. The webcast covers and provides a...
Combine Patterns and Modeling to Implement Architecture-Driven Development: Capturing Your Architectural Decisions Explicitly
Using patterns and Model-Driven Development (MDD) can lead to architecture-driven development. This style of development allows architectural decisions to be captured explicitly and encoded in the system with automation. And...
Architecting on Demand Solutions, Part 16: Deliver IBM Tivoli System Automation Configurations Quickly Using the Failover Configuration Pattern
This paper, Part 16 in the series, shows the user how to rapidly deliver IBM Tivoli System Automation (TSA) configurations using IBM Rational Software Architect (RSA). Businesses need High Availability...
SPiCE: Configuration Synthesis for Policy Enforcement
This paper describes the SPiCE translation system, which simplifies the process of generating configurations for access policy enforcers by providing two tools: a policy editor for writing and refining enterprise-level...


