Greek on Palm

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Greek on Palm

Postby G. Michael Paine » Tue, 22 Jun 2004 23:06:04 GMT

I would like to be able to write Greek on my Palm.
I am considering Paragon Software's, Greek Piloc.
My question is, can this be used, e.g., Greek graffiti, without changing 
the localization of my Palm to Greek? I just want to  make use of Greek 
fonts and graffiti.
I've received no response from either Palm or Paragon.
Anyone??

Michael

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby Derek » Tue, 22 Jun 2004 23:37:53 GMT

G. Michael Paine rose quietly and spake the following:  


I'm surprised that you haven't heard from Paragon. They're usually pretty
quick to respond.

You can leave your interface as English. In order to use Greek in
applications that don't specifically call for it, you'll need to set Greek
as your system language and then set "Interface" option to "Do not
translate."

That is, without changing the default language, my Russian dictionary
showed me Cyrillic characters and allowed me to input them. But no other
program would let me switch from English to Russian. So I set the default
language to Russian and set it not to translate. Now I can enter in
Cyrillic text in any application I choose.

-- 
Derek

Some people dream of success, while other people live to crush those
dreams.

This epigram brought to you by the letter "Y" and the number "9".

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby meg » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 00:32:34 GMT

Michael asks:

Have you asked on any of the Classics mailing lists, or even
soc.history.ancient?  You're more likely to find help among
that pool of potential consumers than in the mixed bag that
is c.s.p.p., I'd bet.  And classicists are pretty rapid
adapters, for humanities types.


Rage away,

meg
(more a Latinist than a Hellenist)


-- 

Meg Worley  _._   XXXX@XXXXX.COM   _._  Comparatively Literate

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby Derek » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 01:51:12 GMT

Meg Worley rose quietly and spake the following:  


Any particular reason you're completely discounting the entire living
population of Greece? ;)

-- 
Derek

Not all pain is gain.

This epigram brought to you by the letter "O" and the number "16".

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby meg » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 03:56:32 GMT



 
Derek asks:

Because I'd gotten the impression from Michael's previous post
(subject line: "Attic Greek" or something along those lines) that
he was interested in the ancient rather than the modern.  I could,
of course, be quite wrong.  Michael, which sort of Greek are you
most interested in here?



Rage away,

meg


-- 

Meg Worley  _._   XXXX@XXXXX.COM   _._  Comparatively Literate

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby G. Michael Paine » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 04:06:01 GMT

In article <cb7b10$pqj$ XXXX@XXXXX.COM >,






Meg,
You are correct, i.e., Attic Greek.

Michael

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby G. Michael Paine » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 04:08:17 GMT




That is just the answer I needed.

Thanks,

Michael

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby Derek » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 05:34:58 GMT

Meg Worley rose quietly and spake the following:  




Well, hey. That's a very logical reason. I missed the previous thread, so
you're one up on me.

-- 
Derek

The journey of a thousand miles sometimes ends very, very badly.

This epigram brought to you by the letter "V" and the number "14".

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby Derek » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 05:35:16 GMT

G. Michael Paine rose quietly and spake the following:  




You're welcome.

-- 
Derek

"The larger the island of knowledge, the longer the shorline of wonder." --
Ralph W. Sockman

This epigram brought to you by the letter "T" and the number "6".

Re: Greek on Palm

Postby Derek » Wed, 23 Jun 2004 05:37:40 GMT

G. Michael Paine rose quietly and spake the following:  




A late semi-random thought occurs.

There are actually two versions in the set - "full" and "lite. Sounds to me
like you're wanting the "lite" version. However, I have the "full" version
installed, simply not fully active.

-- 
Derek

If at first you don't succeed, failure may be your style.

This epigram brought to you by the letter "I" and the number "2".


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