Ken Lunde


Ken Roger Lunde is an American specialist in information processing for East Asian languages.

Academic Background

Ken majored in linguistics at University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1985, where he obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1987, Master of Arts degree in 1988, and graduated with a doctoral thesis on the simplification of Japanese characters in 1994, titled "Prescriptive Kanji Simplification", which was written under the supervision of Professor Andrew Sihler.

Career

Prior to graduation, he joined Adobe Systems on July 1, 1991, where he worked on font development and programming for information processing in CJKV languages; as of 2008, he worked there as a Senior Computer Scientist. He wrote two books on these topics, listed below under [|Bibliography]. A second edition of CJKV Information Processing was published at the end of 2008. His 28-year-long career with Adobe ended on October 18, 2019.
He is a contributor to the Unicode Consortium –formerly as a representative of Adobe –, specializing in CJK Unified Ideographs; he is the editor of the Unicode Standard’s Standard Annex #11 “East Asian Width”,, Technical Standard #37 “Unicode Ideographic Variation Database”, Standard Annex #38 “Unicode Han Database ”, and Standard Annex #50 “Unicode Vertical Text Layout”.
He is also a Unicode representative at the Ideographic Rapporteur Group, a subgroup of the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 2 working group WG2 specializing in Han unification efforts.
In September 2018, Lunde was awarded the Bulldog Award at Internationalization & Unicode Conference 42.
Since 2018 Lunde has been a technical director of the Unicode Consortium and a vice-chair of the Unicode Emoji Subcommittee.

Penname

Ken Lunde chose the penname “Ken Kobayashi” in 1985, a combination of gikun and ateji concepts. The surname Lunde, of Viking origin, shares the same meaning conveyed by the Japanese surname 小林; the given name 剣, chosen both for its phonemic value and for its meaning, conveys his fondness for sharp-edged tools like knives.
The traditional form 小林劍?, where 劍? is actually an ideographic variant coined by his wife Hitomi Kudo and accessed with variation selector VS18 as <U+528D,U+E0101>, is penned in UAX #11,, UTS #37, UAX #38,, and UAX #50; the form 小林劍 was previously used in UAX #38 for Unicode versions 11.0 and earlier. The Japanese simplified form 小林剣 is currently used in his Adobe business card; he suggested in his 2008 book about using the Simplified Chinese form 小林剑 when visiting China.