I didn’t have the CD, so I had to install the file one by one. The last and the one that make the most of work, is, when you don’t have the CD. If you don’t have the files but still have your installation CD, you still need one step more, installing the files from your CD, of course. That far, if you have all the file that it need to make the fonts work, is the finish line. At “Supplemental Language Support”, tick Install Files for East Asian Languages.Go to Control Panel (You do know where is it, don’t you?).
So, how to do that? Follow this simple instruction.
So, because I am faithfully still on XP, I couldn’t change as simple as my friend with 7 (only right-clicking Windows Toolbar and change the language to Korean), Linux (all languages installed before hand), or Mac (how does it work on Mac again?). I knew that to make the blocks changed to Hangul (Korean characters), I had to make sure that the Language bar in Windows changed to Korean.