As for the font themselves, I'm not sure what I can do for you, check this command, it might help. /usr/X11R6/bin/xmodmap /usr/share/xmodmap/xmodmap.qc This example sets a french canadian keyboard. You might also inquire about VMWare express. I have been using it for almost a year now, with MDK 7.1, 7.2 and now 8.0. It works great and allows me to boot a Windows 95/98 session while Linux is still running. Combined with Samba on your Linux it makes it possible to run Linux and Windows on the same computer at once. For 49$ its worth every cents. They have a 30 day demo you can download at their site http://www/vmware.com I used to dual boot, now I don't have a Windows partition anymore on my computer yet I still run windows for the odd applications that can't do without it. That might be an easy solution to your problem too. -- Gerard Perreault [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Thursday 23 August 2001 05:00, Turgut Kalfaoglu wrote: > I have dual boot on my laptop, and I'd really like to stick to Mandrake 8 > > Right now, I dual boot when I have to type something in Turkish and print > it from our NT-controlled printer. > > Two things: > 1) Character set; I use Star Office on the Linux side, and I can't get > Turkish characters. > 2) Printer. When I print from Linux, the thing prints like a low-res > graphical picture; and the output is too ugly to be sent off to a > customer. > > Any *pointers would be appreciated on how to solve these problems. > > Thanks a lot, > -turgut > > > ----- > Turgut Kalfaoglu: http://www.kalfaoglu.com > EgeNet Internet Services: http://www.egenet.com.tr ---------------------------------------- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; name="message.footer" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: ----------------------------------------
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