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Microsoft Quietly Adds Translator Web Site To Live Offerings

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  • Microsoft Quietly Adds Translator Web Site To Live Offerings

    MICROSOFT QUIETLY ADDS TRANSLATOR WEB SITE TO LIVE OFFERINGS

    Appscout, NY
    Monday September 10, 2007

    Microsoft appears to have quietly expanded its suite of Live services
    with the addition of a language translation application.

    Industrious bloggers playing around with a variety of URLs this weekend
    found that three Web addresses now link to a site for Windows Live
    Translator Beta.

    Users who land at translator.live.com, translate.live.com or
    windowslivetranslator.com can copy and paste text into one window and
    have it translated into German, French, Spanish, Italian, Japanese,
    Chinese, Korean, Russian, Dutch, Arabic or Portuguese.

    Microsoft has not yet responded to our inquiries about the app, so
    no word on whether Translator will be rolled into Microsoft's new
    unified installer offering. That feature, which was announced last
    week, enables one-stop downloads of Windows Live Gallery, Windows
    Live Mail, Windows Live Messenger and Windows Live Writer.

    Translator is reportedly powered by Systran, which also does work
    on a similar offering from Google, dubbed Google Translate, which
    currently supports English, Arabic, Chinese and Russian. Systran also
    did not respond in time.

    The Microsoft beta launch comes a week after Google launched a
    Web-based, volunteer language translation program.

    Approved volunteers are given a list of products to translated,
    including main Google sites like Gmail, iGoogle and Google Maps,
    according to a Google blog post. It typically takes a volunteer "weeks"
    to finish translating one site, but Google has thus far finished
    translating 95 percent of the Armenian, Estonian and Slovenian content,
    and Latin is 70 percent complete, according to Google.

    The search engine giant has had difficulty locating translators for
    Abhazian,Tibetan, Inupak, Inuktikut, Wolof and Zhuang, Google said. The
    service has added additional languages recently, however, including
    Navajo, Filipino, several Russian Federation and African languages.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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