tomato

Joined: 31 Jan 2003 Location: I get so little foreign language experience, I must be in Koreatown, Los Angeles.
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Posted: Fri Jan 30, 2004 2:07 am Post subject: |
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Hello, Trinny!
When I came here, I bought a Hangul 97 packet.
It has been updated to Hangul 2002 since then, so someone installed that on my computer too.
I also still have Microsoft Word. I don't have any trouble copying files from one program to the other.
There shouldn't be any problem, because Hangul is nothing more than a translation of Microsoft Word with a few more goodies added.
I wonder why Bill Gates doesn't sue. I guess he decided that he's rich enough the way he is.
If you don't have a bilingual keyboard, you will need one. Each key is marked with both the English letter and the Korean letter. There is a way that you can rig it up so that G equals ��, N equals ��, and so forth, but you would do better to learn to type in Korean the customary way, in which the English and Korean letters are not correlated.
On each side of the space bar, there is a key which serves as a toggle switch between one language and the other. That, too, is a necessity.
If you want to type a third language, such as Japanese or Chinese, you must go into the overhead menu and hunt around--unless you can read the manual which is all in Korean, like I can't. |
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