Computing in the Japanese Language: Technical issues
Guide
to Japanese ComputingThis link deserves special mention. The University of Washington
maintains an extensive library of freeware for Japanese computing, and has
information on working with Mac, IBM, Unix, and Amiga platforms. This is
your 'one-stop shopping center' for Japanese software.
Ken Lunde's Home PageThis link also deserves special mention. Ken Lunde is an employee
of Adobe, and did most of the groundbreaking work in making Kanji fonts
work with modern Microcomputers. If you have any question about Chinese,
Japanese, or Korean fonts, Ken Lunde probably knows the answer.
Jim Breen's
Japanese PageAnother special mention: Jim Breen is the leader of the amazing EJDICT
project. EJDICT is a freeware English/Japanese dictionary database. The
dictionary can be used on virtually any computer. I highly recommend EJDICT.
Japanese BrowsersTips on setting up Netscape and other Web browsing software for reading
Japanese text. A very useful page, with many other interesting links.
Japanese
FontsJapanese Fonts for the Macintosh (for use without the Japanese Language
Kit)