Hi John, We are not currently focused on supporting Thai *yet* so that is perhaps why it is no longer working, but a number of folks have written HOWTOs for adding Thai fonts etc on top of RHL/Fedora. The main thing you need to do is add a font that covers the Thai language, which you can find references to here: http://linux.thai.net/Members/poonlap/TE http://www.linuxeasy.net/modules.php?name=Sections&op=viewarticle&artid=291 We are currently working on adding support for complex text languages (such as Thai) in our Gnome and Mozilla printing sub-systems, so would appreciate your feedback. Regards, Paul On Fri, 20 Aug 2004 15:23, John Francis Lee wrote: > Hello, > > I have just installed Fedora Core 2 and am wondering how I can use > Thai. > > I had redhat 8.0 and had somehow managed to get that working so that I > could type Thai and English in Openoffice documents and generally use > Thai on the machine. Now, apparently the world has changed again. > > Where can I read a how to make this work? > > I have never really understood how fonts and languages work under > X/Gnome anyway. It seems terribly confusing and there are no general > references that I have come across. I tried for more than a year to > get the mozilla/firefox/xprint browsers to print Thai with no luck. I > now cannot even seem to get cups to print at all. At least LPRng did > print English. > > Any help you can give me would be appreciated. > > > > _______________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Win 1 of 4,000 free domain names from Yahoo! Enter now. > http://promotions.yahoo.com/goldrush > -- > Fedora-i18n-list mailing list > Fedora-i18n-list@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-i18n-list