Bijoy Bangla 2000 Software

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Go to: • • • • • • • Although Bangla is the seventh most-spoken language in the world, there was no well-functioning, simple and easy-to-use software for typing in this language until the late 1980s. Understanding the need for a feasible Bangla input software and script writing interface, Mr. Mustafa Jabbar, a Bangladeshi journalist, developed software and a keyboard layout, which greatly changed the printing and publishing industry in Bangladesh. The Bijoy Bangla Software and Keyboard Layout grew popular among users, and Mr.

Jabbar has benefited from (IP) protection for his widely-used Bangla script writing interface system. (Photo: WIPO) Mr. Jabbar is from a rural village in Bangladesh and would later attend the University of Dhaka, where he majored in Bangla Language & Literature. He began his career as a journalist in 1972, while still a student. He started a computer business in 1987, but technological limitations were particularly constraining for the printing and publishing industries in Bangladesh and other Bangla-speaking regions.

Jabbar considered ways to overcome the technological limitations of the Bangla script writing system in these industries. He started by creating some Bangla fonts and subsequently developing the Bangla software and a Bangla keyboard layout known as “Bijoy.” Bijoy has established itself as one of the top Bangla script writing interface systems among a community of 350 million Bangla-speaking people. In fact, the Bijoy Keyboard Layout (BDS 1738:2018) and Bijoy Coding System (BDS 1935:2018) were declared to be the national standard Bangla Script Writing in Bangladesh, making it the only standard for Bangla script writing in the world. Despite increasing competition from other Bangla writing systems, Mr. Jabbar’s pioneering role in the invention of the Bijoy Bangla Script Writing Interface System and promotion of information and communication technology (ICT) has been recognized by the Bangladeshi Government. Hdri studio pack macron. Jabbar was appointed as Minister of the Ministry of Post, Telecommunication and Information Technology in Bangladesh. A keyboard is born The main challenge Mr.

Jabbar faced was accommodating the hundreds of Bangla characters, including additional vowels and consonants and consonant conjuncts, within a standard Macintosh keyboard in a QWERTY layout. At the time, there were already at least two other Bangla keyboard layouts: the “Munir” keyboard, which was developed in 1969 for use in typewriters; and the “ShahidLipi” which was the first complete Bangla font for computers. Jabbar wanted to overcome many of the limitations associated with the existing options by developing a new Bangla interface with a new layout.

A breakthrough came one and a half years of continuous work with the release of the first version of the Bijoy Bangla Software in 1988. The software was initially programmed by an Indian programmer named Mr. Devendra Joshi, but later developed by Mr. Jabbar’s own team of programmers in Bangladesh, while the Bangla keyboard layout and font designs were created by the inventor himself. Jabbar’s popular Bijoy Bangla keyboard layout (Photo: Ananda Computers) Although the Bijoy Bangla Software was initially developed for the Macintosh operating system, it was later released for Windows, Linux and Android operating systems.

With humble beginnings of one font family, Bijoy Bangla Software now hosts more than 110 font families. The software is also compatible with Unicode (BDS 1520: 2018) and ASCII (BDS 1935) coding systems. Moreover, the Bijoy Bangla Script Interface System is also compatible with Asamese script. What’s in a name?

2000

Jabbar believes that the success of creating the right brand name rests upon how effectively these names can touch the heart of the people and at the same time reflect the characteristics of the products. In that regard, he chose to name his software and keyboard layout “Bijoy” (Bangla for “victory”) and planned the release of the first version of Bijoy to coincide with the Victory Day of Bangladesh on December 16, 1988. Another version of Bijoy was named Bijoy Ekattor (Bijoy 71) in reference to the historical Bangladesh War of Independence of 1971. Subsequent versions of the software have also been named in a similar fashion, including Bijoy Ekushey (Bijoy 21) and Bijoy Bayanno (Bijoy 52), commemorating February 21, 1952, an emotional date in the Bangla Language Movement, which ended in the recognition of Bangla as an official language of Bangladesh.

February 21 is not only a very important event in the history of Bangladesh and all Bangla-speaking people. In 1999, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) declared the date “” in tribute to the Bangla Language Movement, as part of a growing recognition of linguistic and cultural diversity around the world. (Photo: UNESCO) Commercialization Soon after the development of the Bijoy Bangla Script Writing Interface System, Mr. Jabbar established his own company,, and has continued to improve the system by developing new versions of the software. For example, the first version of the Bijoy Bangla Software was developed only for use on Macintosh computers, but he introduced a Windows operating system version in 1993. One of the key points for commercialization success was the continued efforts of Mr. Jabbar and Ananda Computers to develop compatible versions of the product for all computing platforms (and later, smartphones).