Robert M. Kerr read Ancient Near Eastern Studies at Tübingen and Leyden. Much of his recent work has been on Semitic epigraphy, especially Punic in Roman North Africa. Recently he published the first scientific edition of late Punic texts in Latin script (Latino-Punic Epigraphy. A Descriptive Study of the Inscriptions, Tübingen, 2010). He is Assistant Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo Ontario.
Thomas Milo is an independent scholar working on computer models of pre-typographic Arabic script structures for his company DecoType. His latest publication is 'Arabic Amphibious Characters: phonetics, phonology, orthography, calligraphy and typography' (in: Vom Koran zum Islam, eds. M. Gross & K-H. Ohlig, 2008). He is an associate member of the Unicode Consortium, to which he has contributed since 1989.