View Japanese Web Pages

Welcome to Shodouka!

This service lets you view pages containing Japanese characters (in the JIS, EUC, or Shift-JIS encodings) without requiring Japanese language support in your browser or operating system. If you can read Japanese but don't want to buy software to see Japanese websites, this service is for you. All the Japanese characters are turned into images that can be viewed in any graphical browser.

Simply enter any URL into the field below and click "Go!", or try one of these starting points:

Shodouka won the First ACM Webbie Prize for its usefulness and popularity. There are quite a few pages out there that reference Shodouka. We have a simple privacy policy that you can view here.

Enjoy the service.

Location:


Shodouka is copyright © 1995-2000 by Ka-Ping Yee. All rights reserved.
This service is an example of a mediator (perhaps one of the first mediators on the Web).
InterTran (tm)
     InterTran (tm), short for Internet Translator, is a free web translation service that can translate single words, phrases, sentences and entire web pages between 676 language pairs.

How do I use InterTran (tm)?
How can I link my Web page to InterTran (tm)?
Answers to Your Questions
Foreign characters are not displayed correctly. What do I do?

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Copyright © 1998-99 Translation Experts Ltd. All rights reserved.

The Monash University ACCESS-J Japanese WWW Page Viewer

Please enter the URL of the Japanese page you want to see. Please note this page allows you to print Japanese on an English PC too!

You can use this server to access Jim Breen's WWWJDIC dictionary server even if you do not have a Japanese-capable browser.
The opening page was prepared by Jim Breen. If this program goes wrong, contact the programmer Silas S. Brown in English.
Please note that he is a very busy University student!

Disclaimer

Japanese Online Dictionary!!!

Can't find the right English term for "Baka," "Omoshire,"or "Sugoi?" Don't sweat it! You can search for almost any Japanese term using the form below. Just type in the word below and you're done! It's that simple!

Jeffrey Fried's Japanese<->English Dictionary Server Main Page
Search in dictionaries of [ words ; names ; legal terms ; life-science terms] with search key:
given as thetext
[ disable fuzzy search for Japanese lookups ]
You can customize various things for all interactions with my dictionary system ( see here), or use the following for some one-time changes for the dictionary lookup only: [Japanese text image color] [size] [kanji should be inlined (kana-only entries too)][link kanji information]
Go to Tokyo, England, and America mirror sites.
For Kanji related info go here.
Other Ways to View Japanese

Trixie Turnpike[Anime Web Turnpike]
Viewing Japanese in a Web Browser
(Updated 6/21/99)

With the multitude of Japanese only pages available here at the Turnpike, I've been asked for help in viewing those pages without having the actual Japanese operating system. Here are some suggestions.

Any OS - Windows OS - Macintosh OS - Unix OS


Macintosh
Since I don't have a Mac, I haven't been able to check these out personally.
However, all of these programs have been suggested by multiple
users (Thanks guys!), so you might want to give them a try.

 MacOS 9
The latest version of the Macintosh operating system comes with
the ability to view multilingual content in both Netscape
and Internet Explorer, as well as other internet applications.

 PanALE/UniText v2.0
A commercialware solution to viewing Japanese in your browser.

  Elixir 2.0
A shareware program similar to MView in nature that will let you
view Japanese as well as Chinese and Korean in web browsers.
Be sure to check our the Elixir Home Page as well.


Windows 95/98

Netscape Communicator 4.61
(with Microsoft Japanese Multilanguage Support)
Yes! You can use the MSGothic font provided by the Internet Explorer Microsoft Japanese multilanguage support to read Japanese on Netscape 4.0 browsers! After downloading a Netscape 4.0 version browser and the Japanese extensions:
  1. Go to the Edit menu and select Preferences.
  2. In the Appearance-Fonts area, set For the Encoding to Japanese and select MS Gothic for both Variable Width Font and Fixed Width Font.
  3. In the Navigator-Languages area, add Japanese [ja] to the list.
Voila! No need for that Japanese helper application. ^_^

 Note: You may need to change the Encoding (In the View menu)
selection to one of the Japanese settings (Auto-Detect preferred)
in order to see the Japanese text.

Microsoft Internet Explorer 5
(with Japanese Extensions)
By downloading Internet Explorer and Japanese Multilanguage Support, you'll end up with a browser which views any Japanese page perfectly.
Works with Internet Explorer 4.0 & 3.0 as well.

Note: You may need to change the Encoding (In the View/Fonts menu)
selection to one of the Japanese settings (Auto Select preferred)
in order to see the Japanese text.

Windows 3.1/95/98

MView 4.5
An excellent shareware program which allows you to read Japanese,
Chinese and Korean on any of your Windows programs.

Even includes auto-detect options for Japanese and Chinese so you don't have to keep changing from EUC to SJIS and so forth. It is unique in that it offers free larger size fonts available for download, which makes your viewing that much more enjoyable. (2678K)

  NJWin 1.6
The very popular shareware program, very similar to MView. For more information, check out the NJWIN CJK Multilingual Support System for Windows 95 page. (1463K)

  TwinBridge AsianViewer 1.1
A commercial program very similar to MView, but without the auto-detect option. For more information, check out the TwinBridge AsianViewer page. Also check out Twinbridge's Internet Series page for similar products. (1437K)


Unix Operating System



Ian Justman has been great enough to share his wisdom on
the viewing of Japanese on Unix systems with us. Thanks Ian!

Unix Information Ian Justman has been great enough to share his wisdom on
the viewing of Japanese on Unix systems with us. Thanks Ian!


This document covers setup of Japanese fonts on Linux and FreeBSD hosts and with "tarballs" from the XFree86 sites for just about any XFree86-supported system.

This file assumes that you have root access to the computer running the server. If you do not, you might want to ask your system administrator or a UNIX-knowlegable friend for help.

More advanced setups include installing Adobe Type 1 scalable fonts or installing a TrueType font server capable of handling multibyte characters, including Japanese. These are beyond the scope of this document. The idea is to get you going as quickly as possible without any additional software or fonts other than the X11R6 core fonts.

Determining Whether You Have The Fonts Needed Installed

You do not need superuser access for this step.

Start up the "xfontsel" program, which is part of the X11R6 core distribution. Select the "fndry" pull-down menu, then check to see if the name "sony" appears. If it does, you are in business. If not, the following paragraphs describe, generally, how to install the core JIS X11R6 fonts.

Installation Using The Major Distributions

Make sure the X(xxx)fnon collection is installed from your distribution media, where (xxx) is the current major release of XFree86. Some distributions have these fonts merged in with the other X11R6 core fonts.

Red Hat, for example, appears to install those fonts by default when the X11R6 package is installed along with the core fonts.

Notes if you have your X11R6 system already installed and configured:

If you are running Slackware, be sure to install the "x332fnon" package with its installation program.

If you are running S.u.S.E., be sure you install the "big fonts" package.

Under FreeBSD, you can use either the /stand/sysinstall program to interactively install the package or you can use pkg_add program at the command prompt to manually install it. Be sure to use the FreeBSD package from ftp.freebsd.org and not the XFree86 package since the FreeBSD packages also often include post-install scripts which need to be run.

Otherwise, install the fonts which are "non-ASCII", "non-English", or "big".

The term "big" in this context only refers to the fact that each character occupies multiple bytes as opposed to one byte each for ASCII. Japanese, Chinese, most other Asian and some European and Middle Eastern fonts fall into this category.

Manual Installation From Files Downloaded
From Xfree86 Or Mirrors

Under just about any installed system, you can get the font package "tarball" at ftp://ftp.xfree86.org or any of its mirrors.

The file will usually be called "XF(xxx)fnon.tgz" where (xxx) is the current major release of XFree86.

The files assume you will be unpacking them at the base of where your X11R6 installation is. On many systems, this will be /usr/X11R6. Your site may be different, like /usr/local/X11R6, for example. The fonts are compressed using gzip; be sure your server supports gzipped fonts. This documents assumes you have a suitable version of tar and a recent version of GNU gzip installed. If you need a copy of GNU gzip, you can always get the latest version at prep.ai.mit.edu in /pub/gnu or any of its mirrors.

Before you can use these fonts, you will need to go into the directory where the fonts are installed which is /(X11R6base)/lib/fonts/misc and run mkfontdir.

XFree86 and several commercial servers like MetroLink's MetroX and Xi Graphics' AcceleratedX come shipped already configured to search the standard locations for fonts, so no additional configuration for font path is required.

You may or may not need to restart your X server to make use of these fonts. Most setups do not require a restart.

Using The Installed Fonts

Once you have either determined that the fonts are installed or have completed installing the fonts, the rest is simple.

Under Netscape Communicator, go to the Preferences dialog (Edit/Preferences). Then expand the Navigator section. Click on Languages. Click on Add, then select Japanese (ja). Click OK.

Then expand the Appearance section. Click on Fonts. There are two JIS encoding schemes Netscape recognizes, jis x0201 and x0208-1983. By default, fixed- and variable-width fonts for both encoding schemes are set to misc which is fine for a system with just the core fonts installed. You only need to modify this if you are handling different encodings and/or if you have multiple Japanese fonts installed.

Click OK.

When you come to a page which has JIS encoding, viewing it is a snap. Select View, then Encoding, then Japanese (auto-detect). Then the page will be rendered in Japanese characters.

Have fun!


If you have any suggestions or corrections,
please mail me at ianj@chocobo.org.


Viewing Japanese @ Anime Web Turnpike
Anime Web Turnpike © 1995-1999 Jay Fubler Harvey. All Rights Reserved.
Last Update: 6/21/98