To Peter Lee - Unionway and MS IME

Peter,

Thanks for giving me an opportunity to respond to
what I consider a reasonable and appropriate question
for this forum.

This is written in English just in case other poeple
in your situation also want to read this little help
and be able to do the installation correctly.
(i.e., I'm assuming that the one who want to install
Korean font in their system cannot already read
Korean - a reasonable assumption, I'd say.)

First, about Unionway and Hangul.
Hangul uses what's called 'double-byte' code. That
means that each Korean character is actually 16-bits
instead of being 8-bit as in the western alphabet.
Your difficulty with typing probably comes from the
fact that when you do 'erase' (del or backspace key),
you end up erasing only one byte instead of two.
This will result in incomplete characters in
your paragraph. So, always remember to erase until
you can see the correct Hangul appear again.
Other than that, I never really experienced problems
nasty enough that I wanted to chuck Unionway.
It's a pretty good deal especially when it's a freebie.

Second, about MS IME and MSIE.
Once MS IME Korean version is installed correctly
according to the instructions, you should be able to
use it immediately. (You might need to reboot the
system if the installer asked you to do so.)
Taskbar is where the 'Start' button is. That long
strip (which you can relocate or hide or resize)
will contain a little blue 'En' appearing whenever
you bring up MSIE.

By clicking on the blue 'En' once, you will see a
little pop-up thing appear on screen. Choose
'Korean IME', and you'll see another pop-up thingie
appear. You can click on the leftmost 'A' and it will
change to Hangul. This will let you input (= write)
in Hangul. To simply view in Korean, you don't have
to do any of this. Just follow View | Font | Korean
on the MSIE menu. Voila! Browser content will
automatically change to Korean.

Hope this helps. Enjoy.