Often times, many people believe that communication over the internet should be unified, in a common global language. Unfortunately, because of cultural, ethnic, and regional differences, it is impossible to impose such a policy. Many have tried in the past, with other languages such as Espanto ( developed in the late 1800's ), but this experiment never took hold. The language is spoken by a handful of international correspondents today, but hardly ever used.
Then comes the question of usage. It is widely known that many illicit computing cartels use code to communicate, in efforts to deter intrusion from law enforcement. Many of their codes are based around a lingual-numerical idiomatic system, that can be difficult to crack. On the other hand, Jawer is a openly used language among IT professionals, Artists, Designers, and programmers to bridge the gap that is posed by colloquial use of English, Spanish, or other widely spoken global languages.
The prime reason Jawer exists is to provide a secure foundation by which people can communicate technical internet matters, while maintaining the highest standards of comprehension, simple vocabulary, and straight forward punctuation. Much of Jawer is derived from a loose form of Nederlands, but its influence is only found in a few general phrases and letter usage. Aside from that, Jawer is concocted through a blend of Indo-European languages, with some phrases common to all languages but universal only to Jawer.
Jawer is difficult to learn, only because it requires some basic understanding of European based lanuages. For example, Eastern Europe is highly influenced by the Cyrillic alphabet and Russian dialects. Meanwhile, Middle Europe is comprised of primarily Romance Languages. Western Europe: Ireland, the UK, Scotland, and Wales, use English as their tongue. In addition, English is also widely spoken in international finance centers, such as Belgium, Monaco, and any islands still under the British flag.
Despite these obvious barriers, it is possible to hone one's own skill slowly by communicating with others using these more formal languages as a spring board of sorts. This is very similar to the informal language of "Spanglish", where common words: "es" = "is" , "mesa", "Sofa", and verbs like "declarar" = "declare", etc can be intermixed so that both parties understand the gist of the communication.
For database usage, such as MySQL, Jawer uses the latin-swedish character set, to accommodate all functional letters and symbols in the general alphabet. Numbers are scribed similarly as Spanish, English, and other forms: 1, 2, 3, 4 etc. Mathematical equations, and operations, are the same globally. The only isolative aspect of the Jawer language is general communication.
Finally, perhaps the most limiting aspect is the cross-over to Asian languages and symbol based communication. There is no existing system to translate Jawer into, for example, Japanese, Cantonese, or Mandarin. The general practice at this time is to translate to English, and then to these languages secondarily.