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by amitsy
3476 days ago
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I agree to the first point you mentioned. In certain utility apps like payments etc this would hold true. In an internet without words i.e. images and video that would be true as well. But currently a large part of internet we use is text. Case in point, this article itself and this discussion. With the current technologies we have, for most part of Hindi speaking users, it is easy to speak in Hindi but very difficult to type in it. As per using hindi words in english alpbhabets, my argument is - majority of India can't even read or speak english, how will they type in English?
A lot of your friends do that because Hindi input is very hard and we need better tools. |
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They won't. They type in Hindi, using the roman alphabet. Big difference. If anything, the roman alphabet is simpler than the syllable based Devanagari.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devanagari
Apparently SMS is big in India:
> SMS is hugely popular in India, where youngsters often exchange lots of text messages, and companies provide alerts, infotainment, news, cricket scores updates, railway/airline booking, mobile billing, and banking services on SMS.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_messaging
I assume it has largely been done with cheap dumbphones even after 2007, which would mean no access to Devanagari characters, so there has been a long time, and a huge incentive to learn transliteration.