For browsers other than Internet Explorer
1. Go to View => Character Encoding and ensure that the “Character Encoding” is set to “Unicode (UTF-8)”.
For Windows XP / 2003 Operating System
1. Go to Control Panel
2. Select Regional Settings
3. Select the “Languages” tab
4. Enable/Check the "Install files for complex script and right-to-left languages" check box.
5. User might be prompted to insert the Windows installation CD to complete the installation.
6. Restart the machine.
For Windows 2000 Operating System
1. Go to Control Panel
2. Select Regional Options
3. On the “General” tab, check the “Indic” check box.
4. User might be prompted to insert the Windows installation CD to complete the installation.
5. Restart the machine.
These steps ensure that the font is rendered correctly in all browsers that support Unicode. These steps should take care of generally almost all the South Asian fonts including Arabic, Armenian, Baltic, Central Europe, Cyrillic, Georgian, Greek, Hebrew, Indic, Japanese, Korean, Simplified Chinese, Thai, Traditional Chinese, Turkic, Vietnamese, etc.
Internet Explorer generally renders the fonts correctly. However, if it does not, the above procedure works for Internet Explorer also.