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| Vista english version : handling chinese characters? I am going to purchase a vista English version because of its English-style operating menu, would there be any problem handling Chinese characters? Best regards |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? "Stanley" <w97667********.com> wrote...[color=blue] > I am going to purchase a vista English version because of its > English-style operating menu, > would there be any problem handling Chinese characters?[/color] It depends on the applications you plan to run. English-language Vista itself, has no problem displaying or handling Chinese chararcters; no matter which edition you use (Home, Business, Ultimate). Vista has built-in support for Unicode, as well as many East Asian codepages: Simplified, Traditional, Big5 (Codepage 950), and oher CJK codepages are well-represented. For example, the file c_950.nls in System32 directory contains the codepage support for Big5; likewise c_936.nls (Simplified), etc. The IME allows you to input Chinese characters in a few different ways. You can install and run the Simplified or Traditional Chinese versions of Microsoft Office on English language Vista. All the Office stuff will be in Chinese; all the Vista stuff will be in English (at least, I've succesfully done this for Japanese; and I believe it is the same for Chinese and Korean versions). Use the IME to configure Chinese keyboards and input Chinese text. Where you may have problems is with applications that "assume" they are running on a specific language OS, and say "give me the default character set, because I'll assume it is Chinese". This works okay on a Chinese version of Windows. But it will not work on an English version of Windows. Chinese text may appear as a series of empty boxes, or question marks. In this case, you need to go into Control Panel, Regional and language Options, and set the "Language for non-Unicode programs" to the right Chinese codepage. Then, if an application requests the "default" system language, without specifically asking for English, Chinese, etc, it will always get Chinese. If you buy Vista Ultimate edition, you will be able to install a Chinese MUI (Multi-lingual User Interface Pack) onto an English version of Windows, and make it look and behave pretty much the same as a Chinese version of Windows. But this is not required, if you don't mind English menus, and you run applications which are either (1) Unicode or (2) smart enough to request the right language from the Operating System. With the Vista Home and Business editions of Vista, you cannot add additional MUI langauges to the base operating system langauge. To be clear: Vista Home and Business can still display and write other languages; it just won't use any other language for its own menus, dialogues etc. If you have the chance to test your applications on an English language Vista before you buy, that might avoid problems later on. But generally, you should be okay. Hope this helps, -- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? "Andrew McLaren" <andrew@fakeaddress.com> wrote in message news:eO4J7qo9HHA.980@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...[color=blue] > "Stanley" <w97667********.com> wrote...[color=green] >> I am going to purchase a vista English version because of its >> English-style operating menu, >> would there be any problem handling Chinese characters?[/color] > > It depends on the applications you plan to run. > > English-language Vista itself, has no problem displaying or handling > Chinese chararcters; no matter which edition you use (Home, Business, > Ultimate). Vista has built-in support for Unicode, as well as many East > Asian codepages: Simplified, Traditional, Big5 (Codepage 950), and oher > CJK codepages are well-represented. For example, the file c_950.nls in > System32 directory contains the codepage support for Big5; likewise > c_936.nls (Simplified), etc. The IME allows you to input Chinese > characters in a few different ways. > > You can install and run the Simplified or Traditional Chinese versions of > Microsoft Office on English language Vista. All the Office stuff will be > in Chinese; all the Vista stuff will be in English (at least, I've > succesfully done this for Japanese; and I believe it is the same for > Chinese and Korean versions). Use the IME to configure Chinese keyboards > and input Chinese text. > > Where you may have problems is with applications that "assume" they are > running on a specific language OS, and say "give me the default character > set, because I'll assume it is Chinese". This works okay on a Chinese > version of Windows. But it will not work on an English version of Windows. > Chinese text may appear as a series of empty boxes, or question marks. In > this case, you need to go into Control Panel, Regional and language > Options, and set the "Language for non-Unicode programs" to the right > Chinese codepage. Then, if an application requests the "default" system > language, without specifically asking for English, Chinese, etc, it will > always get Chinese. > > If you buy Vista Ultimate edition, you will be able to install a Chinese > MUI (Multi-lingual User Interface Pack) onto an English version of > Windows, and make it look and behave pretty much the same as a Chinese > version of Windows. But this is not required, if you don't mind English > menus, and you run applications which are either (1) Unicode or (2) smart > enough to request the right language from the Operating System. With the > Vista Home and Business editions of Vista, you cannot add additional MUI > langauges to the base operating system langauge. To be clear: Vista Home > and Business can still display and write other languages; it just won't > use any other language for its own menus, dialogues etc. > > If you have the chance to test your applications on an English language > Vista before you buy, that might avoid problems later on. But generally, > you should be okay. > > Hope this helps, > -- > Andrew McLaren > amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au[/color] You seem to know about this subject which comes up often here. I have almost no expertise, but I'm looking for good references. Would you recommend this URL: [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/vista/vista_tools/vista_command_line_international_configuration.mspx[/url] to people who are stuck with a mismatch between the native language of their OS and the language they want to use? Or do you have a list of URLs that might help more, that you would like to share? Thanks, -Paul Randall |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? "Paul Randall" <paulr901@cableone.net> wrote...[color=blue] > You seem to know about this subject which comes up often here.[/color] Aw shucks :-) Thanks Paul! I'm not very multilingual myself (although, I'm making good progress with English). But (i) my wife speaks and writes English, French, and Greek; and (ii) I worked for a while for an International organisation with a multilingual staff, and computers running many different languages. So I've kind of learned by osmosis. You're right, that this is a frequent question and there is a lot of confusion and misunderstanding; not helped by Microsoft's very short-sighted policies around MUIs in Vista. [color=blue] > I have almost no expertise, but I'm looking for good references. Would > you recommend this URL: > [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/vista/vista_tools/vista_command_line_international_configuration.mspx[/url] > to people who are stuck with a mismatch between the native language of > their OS and the language they want to use? Or do you have a list of URLs > that might help more, that you would like to share?[/color] I don't know of a really good, easy-to-understand guide. But for a general overview of MUI internals, I'd point folks towards: Guide to Windows Vista Multilingual User Interface [url]http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsVista/en/library/85e289ca-9fd8-4963-b06a-5ecc457006c71033.mspx?mfr=true[/url] A few other useful URLs, not exhaustive: Windows Vista Language Support (general language support lookup list) [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/vista/Vista_Language_Support.mspx[/url] Get World-Ready (main MSFT portal for devs and system admins on multilingual issues) [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/getWR/default.mspx[/url] Michael Kaplan's Blog: [url]http://blogs.msdn.com/michkap/[/url] (Michael is one of the "world-ready guys" at Microsoft, a great advocate for internationalising software; and a wonderful human being as well. Just about any of his blog entries at random is a delightful education on multilingual issues in software). And of course, who can forget: [url]http://www.unicode.org/[/url] Cheers, -- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? Thanks for the info. At various times over the past few years I've tried to understand the Microsoft internationalization stuff. Mostly it just hurts my brain. I've often wondered how much of the Windows bloat everyone talks about is due to Windows internationalization, and how much that effort affects the world. -Paul Randall "Andrew McLaren" <andrew@fakeaddress.com> wrote in message news:2FCDAF27-C21F-4236-A9AE-05A784FD2FE4@microsoft.com...[color=blue] > "Paul Randall" <paulr901@cableone.net> wrote...[color=green] >> You seem to know about this subject which comes up often here.[/color] > > Aw shucks :-) Thanks Paul! I'm not very multilingual myself (although, I'm > making good progress with English). But (i) my wife speaks and writes > English, French, and Greek; and (ii) I worked for a while for an > International organisation with a multilingual staff, and computers > running many different languages. So I've kind of learned by osmosis. > You're right, that this is a frequent question and there is a lot of > confusion and misunderstanding; not helped by Microsoft's very > short-sighted policies around MUIs in Vista. >[color=green] >> I have almost no expertise, but I'm looking for good references. Would >> you recommend this URL: >> [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/vista/vista_tools/vista_command_line_international_configuration.mspx[/url] >> to people who are stuck with a mismatch between the native language of >> their OS and the language they want to use? Or do you have a list of >> URLs that might help more, that you would like to share?[/color] > > I don't know of a really good, easy-to-understand guide. But for a general > overview of MUI internals, I'd point folks towards: > > Guide to Windows Vista Multilingual User Interface > [url]http://technet2.microsoft.com/WindowsVista/en/library/85e289ca-9fd8-4963-b06a-5ecc457006c71033.mspx?mfr=true[/url] > > A few other useful URLs, not exhaustive: > > Windows Vista Language Support (general language support lookup list) > [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/vista/Vista_Language_Support.mspx[/url] > > Get World-Ready (main MSFT portal for devs and system admins on > multilingual issues) > [url]http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/getWR/default.mspx[/url] > > Michael Kaplan's Blog: > [url]http://blogs.msdn.com/michkap/[/url] > (Michael is one of the "world-ready guys" at Microsoft, a great advocate > for internationalising software; and a wonderful human being as well. Just > about any of his blog entries at random is a delightful education on > multilingual issues in software). > > And of course, who can forget: > [url]http://www.unicode.org/[/url] > > Cheers, > -- > Andrew McLaren > amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au >[/color] |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 10:44:24 -0600, Paul Randall wrote: [color=blue] > Thanks for the info. > At various times over the past few years I've tried to understand the > Microsoft internationalization stuff. Mostly it just hurts my brain. > I've often wondered how much of the Windows bloat everyone talks about > is due to Windows internationalization, and how much that effort affects > the world.[/color] Honestly I find Microsoft multi-language support to be pathetic... I mean seriously, the ability to choose my OS language is an Ultimate Extra??? That alone shows that multi-language support was added as an afterthought, not as an integral part of the OS. The same shows in how XP assumes the user has a US Layout keyboard when using a Japanese IME with no way to change it other than messing around with the keyboard driver files. -- Stephan 2003 Yamaha R6 君のこと思い出す日なんてないのは 君のこと忘れたときがないから |
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| Re: Vista english version : handling chinese characters? "Stephan Rose" <nospam@spammer.com> wrote ...[color=blue] > Honestly I find Microsoft multi-language support to be pathetic... > I mean seriously, the ability to choose my OS language is an Ultimate > Extra???[/color] I tend to agree. I've argued about language matters with program managers at Microsoft till I'm almost in tears of frustration, because they don't get it. Windows isn't just a commercial "product" - for better or worse, it's a major cultural artifact: the tool which billions of people around the world use every day to record their thoughts and ideas, communicate with others, conduct business, run countries, make laws, fall in love, teach their children, practice their religion, and so on. Windows is the clay tablet and stylus of the modern age; it's our quill and parchment, our pencil and paper. And yet ... often, we are forced to communicate in a bizarre dialect of American English, because that's the only language available. For those Microsoft guys, the only concern is to maximize returns for Microsoft shareholders*, not to provide cultural resources for the world. Unlike the clay tablet, or pen ink and paper, Windows is controlled by a single commercial company, focused solely on profit. So we have reached a unique inflexion point in human history. Because of its malleability, software could be a wonderful tool for preserving and enhancing linguistic diversity, and fostering cross-lingual communication. But for the sake of a few lousy bucks, modern software has become the opposite: a tool for language death. If I, as an English-speaking Australian, feel linguistically alienated from Windows, how must non-English speakers feel?? So, I'm reluctant to defend Microsoft on this matter. But I must point out a couple of considerations: - very few other major software vendors are any better; and many are worse. I'm thinking of IBM, Oracle, Sun, Adobe, and even Apple. They have pluses and minuses, but none are startlingly, significantly better at international and multilingual stuff than Microsoft. Only open source provides a significant boost in Internationalisation abilities (but, then there are other considerations there). And, Microsoft has made considerable improvements in internationalisation, especially in the last 10 years (ie, they've gone from execrably appalling, to merely bad :). - Vista made a big leap over XP, Server 2003 etc. In previous versions of Windows, the basic product was compiled in English; then other languages were installed on top of the English stuff to create foreign language versions of Windows. In Vista, the base Windows is built using a kind of nonsense, neutral language, with strings that don't mean anything to anyone. Then they apply an MUI on top of that, to give it a language. So in Vista, English is an equal partner alongside Japanese, German, Greek etc; made by installing an English MUI onto the neutral base. During the Vista Beta there was a class of bugs where you'd suddenly find a string of Klingon-looking text in a menu or dialogue box; this was a place where the MUI overlay had not replaced the underlying text. Among other problems, this helped solve those bugs where message box text would be cut off, because dialogue boxes where scaled to suit English text; and the like. Microsoft's LIP program is an excellent step forward in adding linguistic diversity to Windows. But unfortunately, it is still too tightly controlled and overly bureaucratic. I wanted to develop a Scottish Gaelic LIP for Vista - a language which is recognised as an official national language by the Scottish Government, and is actively taught at primary, secondary and tertiary levels in Scotland and other countries. But, short of an official request from the UK Government with funding etc, Microsoft did not wish to open up the programme to a community group or individual. So, no Gaelic for Windows. (Gnome, Firefox etc are of course available in Gaelic editions, and anyone can translate an open source app). Paul Randall wrote ...[color=blue] > I've often wondered how much of the Windows bloat everyone > talks about is due to Windows internationalization, and how > much that effort affects the world.[/color] Well, as you can tell by now, I am an advocate for greater Internationalisation, not less :-) I don't believe the bloat in Vista comes from better support for multiple languages. But to the extent that multilingual abilities adds "bloat", it is a necessary tax, which should have been paid from day one. In fairness I don't believe American software companies are uniquely narrow-minded in this regard. I've heard a senior Australian IT manager, who I otherwise respect, complain long and loud about Unicode, and that "all of us" (who, exactly?) are being held ransom by a "minority" of double-byte character set users. I'm not a great or prolific programmer; but in my own experience, developing Unicode applications is a joy, compared to developing an application which needs to be codepage-aware. Cheers, * to declare my interest, I do own shares in Microsoft, as well as several other tech companies. But I'd happily forego a few dividends, for better multilingual support in Microsoft products. -- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au |
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