Hi, Alex,

> May I suggest: http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/

That's interesting, but the whole point of my approach on my webpage
is that I want it to be accessible to as many people as possible
*without* asking them to download special fonts, let alone asking
them to download a new browser.

> Please view this (updated) link and test to see that the pali
> diacritics display correctly. Please tell me (in private email
> if you prefer) what browser and platform (Linux, Windows, Mac)
> you are using. The ~n and ~N do not seem to be displaying
> correctly; I'll look into that.

> http://alex.voodooglobe.com/alex/043/29/paliunicode.html

It still doesn't work for me.

The characters in the ranges Basic Latin (0–127), Latin-1 Supplement
(128–255), and Latin Extended A (256–383) are okay. But the
characters in Latin Extended Additional (7680–7935) still come out
as squares (i.e. missing glyph).

The page displays in Times New Roman, which is unicode-compliant in
the lower ranges, but does not include glyphs for all the characters
in the Latin Extended Additional character range.

I used Windows XP and Internet Explorer 6, which is probably a
pretty common combination nowadays.

Also, when I follow the link marked "Assuming you have a collection
of fonts, you can try this test" I get an error message: "Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /alex/043/29/ on this server."

Derek.