See What It's Like To Use A Computer In North Korea
This is the start-up screen when you first boot up Red Star 3.
When installing Red Star 3, you're prompted to select a city for your time zone. Interestingly enough, Seoul, South Korea isn't an option.
This is the log-in screen.
You're in! You'll notice Red Star 3 looks a lot like Mac OSX. Past versions looked more like Windows XP. Since Kim Jong-un was spotted using an iMac at his desk back in 2013, some people believe he wanted Red Star to look more like a Mac.
This is the word processor for creating documents.
Here's the email client.
To access your saved documents, you use Red Star's file manager, which looks a lot like Apple's "Finder" management system.
Red Star's web browser is called "Naenara," and is heavily modified version of Mozilla Firefox.
This is Red Star's terminal, where you can input code. Notice the built-in warning "Think before you type."
This is how you personalize Red Star, and we also have access to the wallpapers that are included.
This wallpaper is titled ?????????????? ??????, or "snow at the baksol outpost."
This wallpaper's name translates to "Night view of Zhuangzi River fire."
?????????? ????????????, or "daehongdan's potato flowers"
This beautiful wallpaper translates to "Iron's Azalea," and shows the flowering Azalea shrubs.
"On the horizon" shows a picturesque North Korean farmland.
This gorgeous waterfall wallpaper is called "Echo echo of the falls."
?????????? ??????, or "Beomanli's Outskirts."
This is "Mt Paekdu's Sunrise." Paekdu is an active volcano that borders North Korea and China.
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