[4] In 2002, Bhurgri wrote a paper for Microsoft titled “Enabling Pakistani Languages Through Unicode”.
Referring to Bhurgri's paper, Microsoft's Michael S. Kaplan wrote on his blog: “This is pretty exciting, since at one point Sindhi was being considered for Vista (but was ultimately not done).
He then decided to prepare for the Central Superior Services of Pakistan examinations and sought admission to the Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.)
He received a year of professional training at the Financial Services Academy in Walton, near Lahore.
There, he was offered a job as a consultant and adviser to a Silicon Valley firm, Advanced Micro Research, which he accepted.
It was then that he decided to work on a solution for the use of Sindhi on personal computers, specifically for the purposes of word processing and desktop publishing.
In November 1987, after experimenting for a few weeks, Bhurgri successfully printed a page in Sindhi on the laser printer.
Soon, the newspaper published a column written by Inam Shaikh and typeset on Bhurgri's Macintosh computer.
[2] In July 1988, Pakistani distributors for Apple officially announced Sindhi desktop computing at a ceremony in Karachi, and acknowledged Bhurgri's contribution.
In 1969, while his family was spending a summer vacation in Quetta, Bhurgri met a Kashmiri girl named Nargis.