Unfortunately it looks like this hasn't taken off. An international pictographic language is a great idea tho.
This is a better approach imo: https://artreview.com/ara-springsummer-2014-book-review-xu-b...
This pictographic book is readable without any training.
Most fountain pens have the nib and feed as one glued unit (confusingly, informally called the 'nib'), so you can't adjust the flow. Compare the 'nibs' at the top and bottom of this page. https://www.gouletpens.com/replacement-nibs/c/294
The ones at the bottom can only be used in Noodlers pens.
The Noodler's also have the feed made of cutable ebonite instead of cheaper plastic, so you can carve out a deeper ink channel if you want.
These are 'Hacker-friendly' pens. With most pens the nib and feed are glued in, but in the Noodlers pens they are push fit, so can be adjusted. You can adjust the amount of flex and flow independently.
You can also take out the entire filling mechanism, and use the whole pen body as a reservoir. Neat.
The about section says that it's not a CSS framework, but it seems that it is. If you mean it's better than other CSS frameworks, you should just say so.
Any deviation from the norms of English calls attention to itself, and distracts from the meaning. This can be done by great writers, but always with reason.
Good writing reveals something about the reader.
Bad writing reveals something about the writer.
However since you now seem to agree that it's pretentious, which was my original point, I'll leave it there.
I'm well aware it's a diaeresis, and that it's part of their house style. That's exactly what I'm objecting to.
The diaeresis is obsolete modern English (with rare exceptions) and putting it in interrupts the flow of reading.
There is no excuse for it in 'cooperation', and only the only reason they do it is in order to show off they know about it - IOW pretension.
OT, but it's annoying the way The New Yorker writes cooperation 'coöperation' (ditto 'reëlect'). There's zero justification for this, etymologically or orthographically, it's just pure pretension.