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Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California
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Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Jan 05, 2016

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Page 1: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Technology &Library Services

Wooseob JeongU of Wisconsin — Milwaukee

Sun-Yoon LeeU of Southern California

Page 2: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Workshop Scope Technology for Hangul viewing and writing

Using Korean under English OS Input Method Editors (PC, MAC)

Web browsing Downloading Viewers

Page 3: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

What is an IME? Input Method Editor An IME is a program that allows computer

users to enter complex characters and symbols, such as Korean characters, using a standard keyboard

The user composes each character in one of several ways: by radical, by stroke count, by phonetic representation, or by typing in the character’s numeric encoding index.

Page 4: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Language Support (WinXP) 1. Go to Control Panel. 2. Click on Regional and Language Options. 3. The Regional and Language Options applet appears. 4. Click on the Languages tab. 5. Under Supplemental language support, select the check box beside the applicable language collection:

Install files for East Asian languages. 6. Click OK or Apply.

Page 5: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Keyboard / IME (WinXP) 1. Follow steps 1 - 4 from

"Add Language Support". 2. Under "Text services and input languages,"

click on the "Details..." button.

3. Under Installed Services, click "Add...“

Page 6: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Keyboard / IME (WinXP) 4. In the Add Input Language dialog box, click the input language and keyboard layout or Input Method Editor (IME) you want to add. 5. Once done, click OK to exit. On the Text

Services and Input Languages page, click OK again to close Regional Options.

6. You should now see a language indicator in the System Tray (located at bottom right hand corner of the desktop by default .

Page 7: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Changing Language for non-Unicode Programs (WinXP) 1. Follow steps 1 - 4 from "Add Language Support"

above. 2. Click on the "Advanced" tab. 3. Under "Language for non-Unicode program," select the language version of non-Unicode programs that will be used. 4. Click OK 5. Follow the on-screen instructions. You will be prompted to reboot the system. Click Yes to complete the

change.

Page 8: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Keyboard / IME (WinVista) 1. Go to Control Panel. 2. Click on “Clock, Language and Regional

“option. 3. Select “Change keyboards or other input

methods.” 4. Under Keyboards and Languages tab, click on

“Change keyboards…” button..

Page 9: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Keyboard / IME (WinVista) 5. Under Installed Services, click "Add...“

6. Check Korean keyboard option.

Page 10: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Keyboard / IME (WinVista) 7. Once done, click OK to exit. On the Text

Services and Input Languages page, click OK again to close Regional Options.

8. You should now see a language indicator in the System Tray (located at bottom right hand corner of the desktop by default .

Page 11: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Korean Keyboard Dubeolshik ( 두벌식 ) - the most common Hangul

keyboard layout in use in South Korea. the Ha/En ( 한 /영 ) key, or right Alt key to toggle

between Korean and English the right Ctrl - the Hanja key.

Page 12: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Korean IME The Korean IME enables users to input

Korean characters (Hangul) and Chinese characters (Hanja).

The Microsoft Korean IME 2002 operates in two modes. It operates in the new mode with full features

when used with an application that supports (such as Microsoft Office XP),

but when it is used with a legacy application, like Notepad, it automatically switches into the old Microsoft Korean IME 2000.

Page 13: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Korean IME cont’d Hangul is entered by representing its 24

basic elements and combination of elements, all of which are called Jamos, on the standard 101 keyboard.

By combining these Jamos, all 11,172 Hangul character combinations can be produced.

Page 14: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Korean IME cont’d 1. Type the letter “ ㅇ” that corresponds to

English key “d.” 2. Type the letter “ ㅓ” that corresponds to the

English key “j.” The character “ ㅇ” is now replaced with the combined syllable “ 어 .”

3. Type the letter “ ㄴ” that corresponds to the English key “ ㄴ .” The character combination is now replaced with “ 언” , which finishes the first of the two hanguls needed to represent language

Repeat 1-2.

Page 15: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Korean IME – 한자

Once the Hangul has been formed, the user can then press a Hanja key that will allow the Hangul to be transformed into Chinese Characters called Hanja.

Page 16: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Korean IME – Handwriting applet

Page 17: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Using Internet Explorer 1. Open IE browser. 2. Select View -> Encoding -> Korean

3. If Korean is already checked, select Unicode (UTF-8) and click on refresh icon.

4. Select Korean incoding again.

Page 18: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

IE Troubleshooting 1. Select Tools -> Internet Options. 2. Click on the Advanced tab and uncheck “Always send URLs as UTF-8 (requires restart)” 3. Click on Apply button and OK button.

Page 19: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

IE Troubleshooting 4. Click on the Connections tab and uncheck all checkboxes. 5. Click on Apply button and restart computer.

Page 20: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Input Method (Mac)

Page 21: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Add Input Method (Mac)

Page 22: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Web guides http://www.declan-software.com/korean_i

me/korean_ime.htm http://www.geocities.com/

charleshenrywetzel/keyboard.htm

Page 23: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Use Korean IME – IME Pad The Korean IME has an IME Pad that allows

the user to input Hangul via soft keyboard.

Page 24: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Viewers HWP Viewer

Different viewers by institutions

PDF issue Conflicting with Roman characters

Page 25: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

site address Viewer

법제처 http://www.moleg.go.kr/main/main.do 한글 2007

    MS EXCEL

    MS WORD

    MS POWER POINT

    ALTOOLS

    Acrobat Reader

e- 영상역사관http://photo.allim.go.kr/

http://film.ktv.go.kr 전자앨범 프로그램

(eBookStandard.zip)

행정안전부 http://www.mopas.go.kr/gpms/index.jspMS EXCEL MS EXCEL

외교통상부 http://www.mofat.go.kr/index.jsp Acrobat Reader

국가전자도서관 http://www.dlibrary.go.kr/ ActiveX Control, EOSSmartUpdate

과학기술정보포털서비스 http://www.yeskisti.net/ ActiveX Control, kisti_client.cab

국립중앙도서관 http://www.nl.go.kr/ ActiveX Control, 국립중앙도서관 인증프로그램

    image viewer

국회도서관 http://www.nanet.go.kr/ ActiveX Control

    원문통합뷰어

조선왕조실록 http://sillok.history.go.kr/main/main.jsp ActiveX Control

규장각 한국학연구원 http://e-kyujanggak.snu.ac.kr/index.jsp ActiveX Control

예술로 http://www.art.go.kr/index.jsp ActiveX Control

한국교육학술정보원 http://www.riss4u.net/index.jsp 원문뷰어

전자관보 http://gwanbo.korea.go.kr/main.jsp 한글 2007

    MS EXCEL

    MS WORD

    MS POWER POINT

    Acrobat Reader

e- 뮤지엄 http://www.emuseum.go.kr/index.do ActiveX Control

Page 26: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Romanization Tool McCune-Reischauer Rule ALA-LC Romanization Tables - Korean http://www.romanization.org Korean National Standard for

Romanization 한국 표준 로마자표기 변환기 http://

www.eoneo.com/lang/en/freezone/romanizer/

Page 27: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Web Archive http://archive.org

How to and what to archive

National Level Archiving Efforts in Korea National Library of Korea

http://www.nl.go.kr/ National Assembly Library

http://u-lib.nanet.go.kr:8080/dl/SearchIndex.php

Page 28: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Multimedia Tools 곰플레이어

http://gom.gomtv.com/ Copyright issue Free means malicious codes inside?

Youtube.com Various video postings Search in Hangul

Page 29: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Machine Translation Google Translation

http://www.google.com/language_tools?hl=en

AltaVista - Babel Fish Translation http://babelfish.altavista.com/

Page 30: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Electronic Resource Management Links to Korean DB from OPAC

MARCit! by Ex Libris http://exlibrisgroup.com/category/SFXMARCit! SFX:

http://www.exlibris-usa.com/category/SFXOverview

http://lms01.harvard.edu/F/7KFDDXF37LNEYDKMQKJA8TIK99U231M19GLVISPCSA7CEPH2E8-60050?func=find-b&find_code=SYS&request=010265662&adjacent=1

Page 31: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Search in Korean Special panel session at CKM Spaces do not matter!

Character-by-Character Search n-gram OCLC, most Korean search tools

Spaces do matter! Search based on word (division)

Using a dictionary Google (with n-gram)

Hangul-Hanja Table Issue

Page 32: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

What if Korean characters are broken Unicode is not used always.

Microsoft: 29 different language versions of OS In most cases, no problem, but

Emails Some (web) applications such Flash

How to change non-Unicode default language 1) Control Panel 2) Regional and Language Option 3) Advanced 4) Language for Non-Unicode Programs

Page 33: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Change the default character set

Page 34: Technology & Library Services Wooseob Jeong U of Wisconsin — Milwaukee Sun-Yoon Lee U of Southern California.

Naver vs. Google http://www.naver.com

Number one portal http://searchenginewatch.com/showPage.html?

page=3627304 “ 지식 in” (Wikipedia-like DB) “naverization”

Google in Korea?