


Contact your support personnel or package vendor.” There is nothing wrong with the installer package, it is simply a permissions issue. This will hide the palette editor window. 5.Click on Change system locale 6.Open drop-down. With the palette editor still running, launch the Japanese Hisoutensoku (if you didnt change your language setting to Japanese, you will have to use Applocale or Locale Emulator to launch the game too). A program required for this install to complete could not be run. 1.Open control panel (start->control panel) 2.Select Clock, Language and Region 3.Select Region and Language 4.Change to Administrative tab. If you simply double click on the download package ( apploc.msi), you will receive the following message: “ There is a problem with this Windows Installer package. AppLocale can detect language for non-Unicode program, and user can change the language if detection is incorrect.

thank you for the information, for a min there, i was kinda confused where do i go to change this on my windows7. Set the system locale to Japanese (Japan), then click OK. AppLocale simulates a corresponding system locale for code-page that encoded in the program so that the text is displayed properly (with corresponding font installed). For windows7, go to control panel, then Region and Language -> Administrative -> Change System Locale. With AppLocale, user can run the legacy program without changing the current system locale. Without changing the system locale, the characters inside such non-Unicode program is unreadable. For example, user of an English Windows operating system wants to install and run a legacy (code-page based) program in Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, Hebrew, Hindi, Thai, and other non-Western language that is not coded in Unicode (UTF-8 or UTF-16). AppLocale is a very useful program that allows user to run and view a non-unicode applicaiton software in different language locale with proper character. Microsoft has never updated Microsoft AppLocale since the release of Windows Vista.
