- From: Ed Trager <ed.trager@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2009 13:34:12 -0400
- To: Najib Tounsi <ntounsi@emi.ac.ma>
- Cc: w3c-translators@w3.org, www-international@w3.org
Salaam, Najib, 2009/4/30 Najib Tounsi <ntounsi@emi.ac.ma>: > Ed Trager wrote: >> >> [snip] >> >> One additional point is to always include English somewhere near the >> top of the list too, since it is the de-facto international language >> of business almost everywhere in the world now. >> >> Implementing this, users in Vietnam might then see the following at >> the top of their select list: >> >> * Vietnamese >> * French >> * English >> * Chinese >> * Khmer >> -------------- >> ... all the rest ... >> >> While users in Finland might instead see the following ordering: >> >> * Finnish >> * Swedish >> * Sami >> * Russian >> * English >> ----------------- >> ... all the rest ... >> >> I'd be very interested in people's thoughts on this idea of using >> geolocation to derive a short-list of languages. >> > > A similar idea is used by Google to localize UI. If you are in North Africa > (e.g. Morocco), you are offered two UIs, in Arabic and French. Official > spoken language and "the languages of colonialism ". Of course this might > not seem satisfactory for foreign people present in the country. That's interesting: I wasn't sure how Google did things. As a side note, just as we can treat French as a "language of Colonialism", we can likewise treat Arabic as a "language of Empire" during an earlier period. The fact that Google provides localizations in Arabic and French but *not* in some standard form of Berber is telling. Of course that may change in the future ... Also, Google is missing Spanish, although I'm not sure what fraction of people speak Spanish in Morocco ... So, a hypothetically well-localized web site for Morocco might offer: * Arabic * French * Berber * Spanish * English ------------- Best Wishes - Ed > > Najib. > > -- > Najib TOUNSI (mailto:tounsi @ w3.org) > W3C Office in Morocco (http://www.w3c.org.ma/) > cole Mohammadia d'Ingénieurs, BP 765 Agdal-RABAT Maroc (Morocco) > Phone : +212 (0) 537 68 71 50 (P1711) Fax : +212 (0) 537 77 88 53 > Mobile: +212 (0) 661 22 00 30 >
Received on Thursday, 30 April 2009 17:35:20 UTC