User:ASHwak

Dear Wikipedia; Article on UBS there is an overt statement in the is first displayed as follows: Article on UBS Unicode ECN: Released in February 2005. This ECN specifies that strings are encoded using UTF-16LE. USB 2.0 specified Unicode but did not specify the encoding.

Wiki is faulty when it states "but did not specify the encoding." This is because UTF-16LE is, in fact, a coding standard all by its self. Which has machine acting code within its own code, when being programmed, will cause printers and computers to perform operations as chosen requests the programmer's choosing. If you follow the progress of communication standards then you will see start at ASCII codex does carry machine act-tables code before the lat-letters, number, and punctuations marks section and still more machine action code after the punctuations marks although most these are video display yet there are quite a few of motherboard acting code her as well. the proofing is the real world after doing a loop to print out onto standard out to another motherboard computer at is set to run input from its own communication port. Then you will see that computer responding to the commands as shown on its own output to monitor and printer and storage devices. This was true for ASCII and True for UTF-8LE through my own testing bur in the "UTF"-encoding you will need to find some code action kill microcodes which are apart of the for unambiguous reading and transference reason. Under ASCI the programmer had to either make overstepping different parts of the code in order not to have ambivalent action during transfer operations. This is facts of code transferences. and these books are long since gone out of print and not be around for reading anymore. But Ask old programmers They will confer to this statement. My own library has long ago been burnt to asses in the several fires to my home over the years, I think it is the AI works that I have tried and failed at completing, although I did write a card game that seems to learn(1) from its' opponent. I'm almost 80 years old and worked with computers since 1970's. OH! boy that made me very unpopular among most the student body, when I was going to college. (1): did so without looking up the odds and only had rules to play. switching from starter to second up by asking " Do I start or do you start I/U. This is the only question the software asked. then started dealing cards either placed card on screen or stated READY? later it stated my turn and placed a card, or stated your turn! writen under CP/M Operating System on a Xerox computer. Rev. Aldea Silvarahawk "ASHwak" 2017 10-21 11:12 hours  ASHwak (talk) 15:43, 21 October 2017 (UTC)