ICANN has also put a video explaining the evaluation process on YouTube <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RK49jK-oIpU>, and available on the ICANN website <http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-15oct07.htm>.
The wiki pages can be accessed by typing example.test in the characters of one of the 11 languages, or by going to
http://idn.icann.org .
“These wikipages are key to the test. We want to know how the URL displays in the Internet browser, if it works when you cut and paste it into the body of an email to a friend, and how all of this impacts the root zone,” Dr Twomey added.
The 11 evaluation wikis will remain online until IDNs are fully implemented and the first top-level domain is introduced in the evaluation language.
The full introduction of IDNs will mean that people can write the whole of a domain name in the characters used to write their own language. Presently you can only use these characters before the dot, so .com, .net, .org and the like can only be written in characters from basic Latin. IDNs will change this so that literally tens of thousands of characters will be available to the world.
<http://www.icann.org/topics/idn/scripts-languages-labels-15oct07.jpg>
The "example.test" labels with the associated scripts, the languages that were used for translation of the two terms "example" and "test", and the A-labels for second and top level that are inserted in the IDN TLD zones and DNS respectively.