Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. The message should then be magically transformed into recognisable characters.
If it isn't, try another encoding such as 'Cyrillic Windows'. Before you send a Russian email, you should make sure that the encoding is set to 'Cyrillic KOI8-R', so that your recipient's email program knows what to expect and can hence correctly display the cyrillic text. If you don't then your recipient will probably receive a lot of weird characters and in order to decipher them will have to manually change the encoding on their email system.
Links to font archives. Links to sites offering commercial fonts. Links to Cyrillic converters. Unicode 5. See Kodeks site for details. Smart package of Microsoft's core fonts. XSerif Cyr. XSerif Old Russian. PT Courier Cyrillic. Free download from ParaType. Both TrueType and PostScript. Kirillica Wincyr. Your efforts in resolving the issue is highly appreciated. I would like to inform you that t he Language pack is available in Ultimate and Enterprise editions of windows 7, if you have Windows Ultimate or Enterprise edition you may follow the steps below and install the language pack and verify whether it works.
The steps provided in the link which you have mentioned is correct but if you are getting Windows update, please click on that. If you are not getting optional update option then try to click on check for updates from the left menu. This will show you the updates which need to be installed. It will show important and optional updates, if available. Then try to click on optional update and follow the rest troubleshooting steps.
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