+Windows 2000 input methods are not recognized by Emacs (as of v21.1).
+These input methods cause the keyboard to send characters encoded in
+the appropriate coding system (e.g., ISO 8859-1 for Latin-1
+characters, ISO 8859-8 for Hebrew characters, etc.). To make this
+work, set the keyboard coding system to the appropriate value after
+you activate the Windows input method. For example, if you activate
+the Hebrew input method, type "C-x RET k iso-8859-8 RET". (Emacs
+ought to recognize the Windows language-change event and set up the
+appropriate keyboard encoding automatically, but it doesn't do that
+yet.)
+
+Multilingual text put into the Windows 2000 clipboard by Windows
+applications cannot be safely pasted into Emacs (as of v21.1). This
+is because Windows 2000 uses Unicode to represent multilingual text,
+but Emacs does not yet support Unicode well enough to decode it. This
+means that Emacs can only interchange non-ASCII text with other
+Windows 2000 programs if the characters are in the system codepage.
+Reportedly, a partial solution is to install the Mule-UCS package and
+set selection-coding-system to utf-16-le-dos.
+
+* The `configure' script doesn't find the jpeg library.
+
+This can happen because the linker by default only looks for shared
+libraries, but jpeg distribution by default doesn't build and doesn't
+install a shared version of the library, `libjpeg.so'. One system
+where this is known to happen is Compaq OSF/1 (`Tru64'), but it
+probably isn't limited to that system.
+
+You can configure the jpeg library with the `--enable-shared' option
+and then rebuild libjpeg. This produces a shared version of libjpeg,
+which you need to install. Finally, rerun the Emacs configure script,
+which should now find the jpeg library. Alternatively, modify the
+generated src/Makefile to link the .a file explicitly.
+
+(If you need the static version of the jpeg library as well, configure
+libjpeg with both `--enable-static' and `--enable-shared' options.)
+
+* Building Emacs over NFS fails with ``Text file busy''.
+
+This was reported to happen when building Emacs on a GNU/Linux system
+(RedHat Linux 6.2) using a build directory automounted from Solaris
+(SunOS 5.6) file server, but it might not be limited to that
+configuration alone. Presumably, the NFS server doesn't commit the
+files' data to disk quickly enough, and the Emacs executable file is
+left ``busy'' for several seconds after Emacs has finished dumping
+itself. This causes the subsequent commands which invoke the dumped
+Emacs excutable to fail with the above message.
+
+In some of these cases, a time skew between the NFS server and the
+machine where Emacs is built is detected and reported by GNU Make
+(it says that some of the files have modification time in the future).
+This might be a symptom of NFS-related problems.
+
+If the NFS server runs on Solaris, apply the Solaris patch 105379-05
+(Sunos 5.6: /kernel/misc/nfssrv patch). If that doesn't work, or if
+you have a different version of the OS or the NFS server, you can
+force the NFS server to use 1KB blocks, which was reported to fix the
+problem albeit at a price of slowing down file I/O. You can force 1KB
+blocks by specifying the "-o rsize=1024,wsize=1024" options to the
+`mount' command, or by adding ",rsize=1024,wsize=1024" to the mount
+options in the appropriate system configuration file, such as
+`/etc/auto.home'.
+
+Alternatively, when Make fails due to this problem, you could wait for
+a few seconds and then invoke Make again. In one particular case,
+waiting for 10 or more seconds between the two Make invocations seemed
+to work around the problem.
+
+Similar problems can happen if your machine NFS-mounts a directory
+onto itself. Suppose the Emacs sources live in `/usr/local/src' and
+you are working on the host called `marvin'. Then an entry in the
+`/etc/fstab' file like the following is asking for trouble:
+
+ marvin:/usr/local/src /usr/local/src ...options.omitted...
+
+The solution is to remove this line from `etc/fstab'.
+
+* Accented ISO-8859-1 characters are displayed as | or _.