� wrote:

> that I cann't input both Chinese and Japanese. I tried to change the

You may need an IME for the following writing systems:

# CJKV;  (Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese)
# INDUS VALLEY WRITING SYSTEMS;
* Tibetan;
* Thai:
# BiDI WRITING SYSTEMS;
* Mongolian;
* Arabic;
* Hebrew;
# BOUSTROPHEDOUN WRITING SYSTEMS;

OOo does not directly support Boustrophedoun Writing systems.

WINDOWS:

For international keyboard support, refer to the following
articles:
* WInXP, Win2003:
http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/handson/user/xpintlsupp.mspx;
* Win2K:
http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/handson/user/2kintlsupp.mspx;

For IMEs refer to the following article:
http://www.microsoft.com/globaldev/handson/user/IME_Paper.mspx

For Windows, my recommendation is to use NJStar Communicator.
This is a commercial product, available from
http://www.mjstar.com
The virtue of this product is that it covers Chinese,
Japanese, and Korean.

The IMEs that Microsoft produces have the following issues:
* One IME per language;
* Require Microsoft Office to be installed;
* Are not reliable for non-Microsoft programs;

LINUX:

For international keyboard support refer tot he following
article:

For IMEs refer to the following article:

For Linux, my suggestion is to use SCIM. http://www.scim-im.org/

MACINTOSH:

For international keyboard support refer tot he following
article:

For IMEs refer to the following article:

Note: The following versions of Windows are known for their
monolingualism. Upgrade to Linux if you need to create
multilingual documents.

* Windows 98;
* Windows 98 SE;
* Windows ME;
* Windows Vista Start;
* Windows Vista Home Basic;
* Windows Vista Home Basic N;
* Windows Vista Home Premium;
* Windows Vista Business;
* Windows Vista Business N;

xan

jonathon

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