Here is the verbatim copy, in the case it disappears:
Armenian Chant
●
LimonjianNotation – font developed by Ruben Tarumian and sponsored by the
Vem Cultural and Educational Foundation; accompanying handbook,
A Brief Guide To Armenian Musical Notation, written by Seda Stamboltsyan.
Braille Music
●
BMC – Braille Music Compiler – developed by Mario Lang; converts Braille Music into MusicXML and Lilypond
●
BME2 Braille Music Editor –
●
Braille Music 2021 (BM2021) – developed by non-profit association, Giuseppe Paccini
●
Braille Music Notator v0.9.3b – developed by Toby W. Rush; online editor of braille music
●
Braille Music Viewer v0.9.3b – developed by Toby W. Rush; used to display self-translating excerpts of braille music on any web page
● Concert-O-Braille – developed by ?; out of business; prints Braille scores from NIFF files
●
Freedots – developed by Mario Lang; converts MusicXML into Braille Music
●
GOODFEEL – developed by dancingdots; converts Lime to music Braille
●
music21.braille.translate – developed by Michael Cuthbert, Christopher Ariza, Benjamin Hogue, and Josiah Wolf Oberholtzer; Braille music transcription with export function
●
Music4VIP (Music for visually impaired people) – developed by a consortium of European universities and colleges
●
Toccata – developed by ?; Braille Music Transcription software
Byzantine Chant
●
BZQ – developed by Panagiotis Katsoulis
●
Byzantina 1.0 – developed by Stefanos Souldatos and Father Ephraim [DEAD LINK]; Byzantina 1.1 available
here
●
Byzantinografos 2.0 – developed by Gezerlis G. Velissarios
●
ByZ\LaTeX – developed by Ioannis A. Vamvakas and Panagiotis Kotopoulis; Byzantine music using LaTeX.
●
ByzWriter 2.0 – developed by Dr. Gezerlis G. Velissarios [DEAD LINK]
●
EBYPES – developed by ?; byzantine chant notation typography [DEAD LINK – link farm]
●
“EZ” Byzantine Music Font Package – developed by St. Anthony’s Greek Orthodox Monastery
●
KA Arvanitis – developed by Trevor Bullock; font styled on neumes in Ioannis Arvanitis’ Akathist book; used in Kassia Byzantine notation program
●
Kassia – developed by Trevor Bullock; to create music written in Byzantine notation. It takes an XML file, parses the neumes and lyrics, and generates a formatted PDF using ReportLab
●
Melodos – developed by Savas Papadopoulos
●
Neanes – developed by Daniel G. Arthur; uses “EZ” Byzantine Music Font Package created by St. Anthony’s Greek Orthodox Monastery
●
Psaltiki Recognition Toolkit – developed by Christoph Dalitz (primary developer), Georgios K. Michalakis, and Christine Pranzas; Gamera toolkit for optical recognition of byzantine chant notation
China
●
Cipher Music (SIL) keyboard – developed by SIL Language Technology; Indonesian Cipher Music Notation (Kepatihan) and Chinese jiǎnpǔ notation
●
Doulos SIL Cipher – developed by SIL Language Technology; Indonesian Cipher Music Notation (Kepatihan) and Chinese jiǎnpǔ notation
●
Fengya Composer Software (Fēngyǎ Zuòqǔ Dàshī Ruǎnjiàn | 风雅作曲大师软件) – developed by Fengya Software Co.; supports jiǎnpǔ, guqin tablatures, and other chinese notation systems in addition to music production features.
●
Guangling Shenqi – developed by guanglingsan.com; Guqin jianzipu, a form of simplified character notation
●
Jianpu – developed by 0aax; jiǎnpǔ notation
●
Musicxml_to_jianpu – developed by Che-Huai Lin; jiǎnpǔ notation
●
Qin Music Notation Generator – developed by Candy Yiu; combination Chinese characters and other music components
●
S-Music – by A1 Soft; jiǎnpǔ notation
●
Simp Erhu (Simplified Musical Notation Input System) – by ?; jiǎnpǔ notation
India
●
Carnatic Music Notation Typesetter – developed by Arunk; web-based application that allows typesetting sheet music for Carnatic music. It can generate notations in English, and Indic languages: Sanskrit, Telugu, Tamil and Kannada.
●
Carnatic Music Typesetting – developed by GK Palem
●
Carnatika – developed by Vaitheeswaran S B
●
Chanda Player 1.0 – developed by Dharambir Singh Dhadyalla; software to create chandas and change the swaras in different groupings
●
iSargam – developed by Stanly Mammen, Ilango Krishnamurthi, A. Jalaja Varma, and G. Sujatha
●
MIDI Swarlipi – developed by Dev Bali
●
Ome Swarlipi – developed by Dr. Ragini Trivedi
●
SangeetXML – developed by Chandan Misra
●
SwaralipiXML – developed by Chandan Misra, Anupam Basu, Tuhin Chakraborty, and Baidurya Bhattacharya; supports Carnatic and Hindustani systems
●
Swara Player 1.1 – developed by Dharambir Singh Dhadyalla; software to input swaras in sargam to hear the notations or practise along
●
Vishwamohini Melody Player – developed by Shivraj Sawant
Indonesia
●
Cipher Music (SIL) keyboard – developed by SIL Language Technology; Indonesian Cipher Music Notation (Kepatihan) and Chinese jiǎnpǔ notation
●
DaminatilaFont – developed by Asep Saepudin; used for Sundanese drum notation and gamelan
●
Doulos SIL Cipher – developed by SIL Language Technology; Indonesian Cipher Music Notation (Kepatihan) and Chinese jiǎnpǔ notation
●
KepatihanPro – developed by designed by Matthew Arciniega and formatted by Ray Weisling to allow it to be on the same computer with the earlier font Kepatihan by Carter Scholz; font used for cipher notations
●
Notasi Angka – developed by Danny Salim; number/cipher music notator
●
Parnumation 3.0 – developed by Risky Aswi Ramadhani, Itot Bian Raharjo
●
Pipilan – developed by Charles Matthews; program built in Cycling’ 74 Max for composition involving gamelan and electronics
●
Text Based Chipper Notation for Angklung Music Compositions – developed by Eko Mursito Budi, Asep Suhada, Hermawan K. Dipojono, Andrianto Handojo, and Joko Sarwono
Iran
●
Farabi Composer – developed by Persian Musicshop
Japan
●
Koto Score Generator – developed by Craig Stuart Sapp and Sachiko Deguchi; based on the
Humdrum **koto specification
●
Scoremaker – developed by Kawaii; supports jiǎnpǔ notation
Jewish Cantillation
●
Trope Trainer – developed by American Conference of Cantors, Hazzan Solutions, and the Reform Movement; web-based cantillation training software
Thailand
●
Mahori – developed by Kittiphong Meesawat; music notation software into either Thai alphabet or number music notation.
Turkey
●
Mus2 – developed by Utku Uzmen and M. Kemal Karaosmanoğlu
●
Nihavent – developed by Utku Uzmen; early version of Mus2
●
SymbTr – developed by M. Kemal Karaosmanoğlu
Western Chant; Early Modern European
●
Caeciliae – developed by Dr. Paul F. Ford; font designed to assist in the notation of “modern” (square note) notation of Gregorian chant
●
Chanter – developed by Timothy Kozak; music editor that uses Gregorian Chant notation
●
Ciconia 1.8 – developed by Michael Scott Cuthbert; font for 14th and early-15th century music notation
●
GABC – developed by by a monk of the Abbey of Sainte Madeleine du Barroux and has been improved by Élie Roux and by other monks of the same abbey; notation based on ASCII characters enabling creation of Gregorian chant scores
●
GregEdit – developed by Abbaye Notre-Dame de Fontgombault; software for editing and hearing Gregorian chant
●
GregorioTEX – developed by Élie Roux, Olivier Berten, Henry So Jr, Br. Samuel Springuel, Br. Elijah Schwab, Jakub Jelínek, Br. Gabriel-Marie; converts gabc file into a GregorioTEX file;
details
●
Grégoire – developed by by a Benedictine monk, for use in his monastery; program for editing partitions for Gregorian chant
●
Illuminare Score Editor – developed by
The Gregorio Project; onilne score editor for Gregorian chant
●
Medieval – developed by Robert Piéchaud; Finale plug-in
Znameny Chant
●
Fonts-Znam – developed by Aleksandr Andreev and Nikita Simmons; fonts for typesetting Znamenny and other related Slavic neumatic music notations systems (Demestvenny, Put, Kondakarian)
●
HookUp – Neumatic Editor – developed by ; HTML-based Neumatic Notation Editor
Miscellaneous
●
DigiScore – research project exploring digital scores.
●
Flat – developed by Tutteo; collaborative online music notation platform
●
Grey Larsen Irish Traditional Music Ornamentation Symbols for Lilypond – developed by Bret Pimentel
●
Hellenic Music Notation – developed by Pablo Bellinghausen; A fully-chromatic notation system with emphasis on legibility and the use of Greek naming conventions
●
Hummingbird – developed by Blake West and ?; new type of notation system
●
Impro-Visor – developed by Robert M. (Bob) Keller and others at Harvey Mudd College; allows the easy construction of leadsheets
●
LeadMuse (LM) – developed by Andrei-Lucian Dragoi; uses a numerical musical notation system (NMNS) and a modular periodic bilinear (musical) staff (MPBS) based on the microtonalist Leo de Vries’ “diatonic twinline” musical staff
●
Lilychant – developed by the Nottingham Russian Orthodox Church; Lilypond based software allow to creation of musical scores for Orthodox chants
●
Orarion – developed by Ilya Tolchenov; web-based notation program optimised for writing Orthodox choral chants
●
Nashville – developed by S. Goudie; converts Nashville Number System (NNS) to chords
●
NotesTyper – developed by Alexey Arkhipenko; converts text typing into music
●
Symbolist – developed by R. Gottfried and J. Bresson; library for graphic/symbolic score editing
●
TextMusic app – developed by Supertintin Co., Ltd; for creating numbered music notations like jiǎnpǔ, not angka, and other cipher-numeric music notation systems