Starting in 1996, Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to the Wayback Machine after an embargo period.
Crawl EH from Alexa Internet. This data is currently not publicly accessible.
TIMESTAMPS
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20060216030859/http://home.att.net:80/~jameskass/
Does Your Browser Support Multi-language ?
... and would you like to see what's in those really BIG fonts ?
Unicode is the World's standard for encoding text. Most all of the characters
used in modern writing systems have already been assigned to unique
code positions and work is under way to add some fairly exotic modern
scripts as well as provide standardized encoding for ancient scripts.
If your browser has multilingual capabilities, it probably uses Unicode to
address the various letters, characters, and symbols shown on your screen.
If you're using Windows 2000, you already have a Unicode-aware system along
with special tools, such as the enhanced Character Map, enabling use and
display of special character from large fonts like MS Hei, MS Song, GulimChe,
or MingLiU. (Beware that W2K Character Map does not offer all of the valid
Unicode ranges and thus often can't offer all of the glyphs in a font's
repertoire.)
But, if you're using an older operating system, you may have tried to see
some of those special characters and become fairly frustrated when your font
viewer failed or totally choked-up.
Using Unicode-aware software such as Opera, Netscape, Internet Explorer, or
Outlook Express, to name a few, it is possible to view special characters and
simulate the cut and paste features of the Windows 2000 Character Map even on
the Windows 95 operating system.
zipped for download so you can view them any time you want, off-line, for free. File size: 88,985 bytes. (When un-zipped and run, about 3,468,582 bytes.)
Many of the sheets appear blank. This is because many of the codes have
not yet been assigned or formalized, or because your browser and system
lack the font(s) required to display the characters.
Code2001 Code2001 is a beta test font for Plane One! Updated April 5, 2005.
Code2002 Code2002 is a beta test font for Plane Two! Updated April 5, 2005. Code2002 has about forty percent coverage of CJK ideographs in Plane Two and is still rather rough.
In addition to concise charts showing the character repertoire mapped
to hexadecimal codepoints, multilingual sample pages are available showing
many exotic scripts.
Be sure to follow the link to the TITUS homepage to
learn about digitally encoding the treasury of our world's documentary
heritage to enable study and allow preservation of ancient writings in
their original scripts.
WHILE VIEWING THE CHARTS...
If you want to see the difference between various large fonts, such as
Chinese Simplified or Chinese Traditional, try changing the default font
in your browser while viewing the specific reference sheet. If you are
using the Microsoft Internet Explorer, pull-down the "View" Menu,
slide the mouse across the "Fonts" selection, and choose an
alternate font-style from the listing.
My name is James Kass. Email to let me know if you
like my site, or have any suggestions.