lotus

previous page: 17. I have an ethernet card on my PC, and installed a software Hangul for MS-DOS. I still can't write and see Hangul characters when connecting to remote host with telnet-client(e.g. NCSA Telnet).
  
page up: Hangul & Internet in Korea FAQ
  
next page: 19. I'm using stevie as my Hangul editor, but it leaves a garbage named "gmon.out". How can I remove it?

18. My Mac is connected to the campus network at my school and I have Hangul Talk,but I can't write and read Hangul over the network.




Description

This article is from the Hangul & Internet in Korea FAQ, by Jungshik Shin jshin@minerva.cis.yale.edu with numerous contributions by others.

18. My Mac is connected to the campus network at my school and I have Hangul Talk,but I can't write and read Hangul over the network.

Your communication s/w should be 8bit transparent. NCSA Telnet is not 8bit
trasnparent and you need MacBlueTelnet available at
ftp://ftp.ifcss.org/pub/software/mac/networking/MacBlueTelnet (originally
made for Chinese. hangul capable telnet client including input method for
Hangul. thus no need to get separate Hangul capable environment if what you
want is just hangul terminal emulator. You need to get Hangul font and input
method separately packaged in langKorean.sea.bin. Recently, however, I found
Hangul input method included in MacBlue Telnet has a couple of serious flaws
making it less useful as a stand-alone Hangul telnet client without
system-wide Hangul support such as Korean Language Kit(KLK) or Hangul Talk.
Output has no problem, but input automata for Hangul is
misimplemented(complex vowels and complex consonants are assigned separate
keys instead of two key sequences assigned to single vowels/consonants of
which they're made). It still works well with input method included in
Hangul Talk/KLK. Hangul patched NCSA Telnet 2.7b5 and NiftyTelnet 1.1(the
latter is smaller and much faster than NCSA Telnet according to Jeong-hyun
Kim who patched both of them for Hangul) are available in
/pub/mac/internet-sw at Mac Hangul archive is 8bit transparent telnet client
to be used in Hangul-capable-environment. See Subject 5)) for Mac hangul
environment.

Kim, Jeong-hyun also released Hangul NiftyZtelnet 0.5 which supports Zmodem
download, a handy feature when getting files from Korean on-line
services(See Subject 33) Other telnet clients for Mac supporing Zmode file
transfer include Mugunghwa by Elex (priced 300 k won), Black
Night(http://www.kagi.com/raine/), and ProTerm(http://www.intrec.com/).
ProTerm doesn't seem to be World Script savvy, which means it can't be used
for Hangul. [Posted to Hangul usenet newsgroup han.comp.sys.mac by Kim,
Jeong-hyun].

To enter Hangul after connecting to a Unix host, you have to set terminal
8bit clean. See Subject 16 for terminal(stty) setting in Unix.

You also have to tinker with Hangul font setting to display Hangul in
appropriate size and shape.

Implementation of Telnet by InterConn is said to be 8bit clean,but I haven't
had chance to try it. Contact sales@interconn.com for further details.

 

Continue to:













TOP
previous page: 17. I have an ethernet card on my PC, and installed a software Hangul for MS-DOS. I still can't write and see Hangul characters when connecting to remote host with telnet-client(e.g. NCSA Telnet).
  
page up: Hangul & Internet in Korea FAQ
  
next page: 19. I'm using stevie as my Hangul editor, but it leaves a garbage named "gmon.out". How can I remove it?