I see. Thanks Ross. That makes sense. Sent from Samsung Galaxy ^^ On Aug 6, 2012 8:12 PM, "Ross Cavanagh" <ross.cav at gmail.com> wrote: > On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 8:58 PM, Fajar Priyanto <fajarpri at arinet.org> > wrote: > > > On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 7:54 PM, Ross Cavanagh <ross.cav at gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > > > You're prompt will reference whatever the hostname is doesn't it? I'm > > > located in Tokyo, I haven't setup any servers with Japanese hostnames > > > actually, but on occasion some filenames are written in Japanese. What > is > > > it you wanted to see exactly? It also depends on the keyboard setup you > > > have set to the default. Most people in Japan set the keyboard to a US > > > style - where they enter romaji, and don't usually enter the kana from > > the > > > different keyboard layout. So, you type the roman characters ra for > > example > > > to make ら, but there is a Japanese keyboard layout where you can type > > the ら > > > character directly - but I never really see that used. > > > > > > So, as far as I know, you'll be using whatever input methods you > actually > > > have on your local system where you're ssh'ing from. So, if you needed > to > > > write Japanese input you'd need some local IME on your particular > system. > > > > Hi Ross, thanks for your time. What I want to know is, during the > > initial ssh login. > > Will it display the dialogue fully in Japanese? e.g. fajar at 8.8.8.8's > > password: (will it be in Japanese?) > > > > As far as I'm aware, you would be seeing virtually everything in English > as the directory structures are in English. Usually people's home > directories are setup in English, I don't think I've ever come across a > user login that does use Japanese actually (not sure if you can - otherwise > your SSH connection you'd have to match you user name - eg. Ross would be > my katakana name, ロス@8.8.8.8 - don't even know it's possible). I've worked > at one Japanese company as the only foreigner, and all others companies > have been international ones - but everyone uses Roman characters for their > logins and not kana or kanji. > > Same with passwords. > > Usually, on systems I've seen in Japan most of the time files and folders > are creating using Roman characters for naming (most of the time). Within a > document, of course it could be written 100% in Japanese. Some folders and > files can be in Japanese, so it can be hard to navigate through some > directories if you don't have any IME tools for Japanese input. Lots of tab > autocomplete and copy and pasting at times - but that's usually within a > home directory for a user for example. > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >