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How to Read Arabic Text on the Internet

Reading the Arabic text on the worldwide web, Usenet news or e-mail is becoming a necessity and a nightmare at the same time. Being a necessity is no surprise, but being a nightmare is what seems odd.
We understand you stopped by to get an answer to the question "How" not "Why", so we listed a number of available alternatives depending on your operating system, at least for the popular operating systems where we know of a solution. USE INFO HERE AT YOUR OWN RISK.

Arabic Browsers for Various Operating Systems:
[ Windows 2000 (NT5) ] [ MS Arabic Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows NT 4.0 Arabic Enabled ] [ MS English and Other Windows 95, 98, NT 3.51 or later ] [ MS Windows 3.1x, NT 3.5 ] [ MAC OS ] [ UNIX and Linux ] [ Browser and OS Independent Solutions ]
Please check with vendors (or their web sites, provided below) for system requirements, features, compatibility, installation, configuration, known bugs, security fixes, technical support and pricing (if not free)


In some cases you may need to change font size or configure the browser to recognize a user-defined language (or font). Some require manual code page switching as well. In Netscape, see under the Preferences menu. In MSIE, font size is under View/Font and fonts are under view/options/font settings. Note that Arabic MSIE version 3.02 does not need any user intervention to work. It detects the code page on its own (provided the source has the right character set tag), but you may want to enlarge/minimize the font size for comfortable reading. For the Arabic pages here, we did our testing using Sakhr's Sindbad.