Translation vs. localization (and those other long words)

This discussion belongs to Translation news » "Translation vs. localization (and those other long words)".
You can see the translation news page and participate in this discussion from there.

Anita Lagerwall
Anita Lagerwall  Identity Verified
Local time: 23:57
английский => норвежский
+ ...
Should not G14N be G11N? Apr 18, 2011

Following the logic in the article about the codes, I get 11 letters between ghe G and the N.
Maybe I cannot count? Or is there something I don't understand?


 
Gerard de Noord
Gerard de Noord  Identity Verified
Франция
Local time: 23:57
Член ProZ.com c 2003
английский => голландский
+ ...
Should not G14N be G11N? Apr 18, 2011

Anita Lagerwall wrote:

Following the logic in the article about the codes, I get 11 letters between ghe G and the N.
Maybe I cannot count? Or is there something I don't understand?


LOL, or shoul it be 101?
G4d


 
B D Finch
B D Finch  Identity Verified
Франция
Local time: 23:57
французский => английский
+ ...
Never mind the codes, but Apr 18, 2011

As what they describe as localisation is what I understand to be translation, this is a worrying sign that some translation clients have a very poor understanding of what translation is about.

 
Michael Wetzel
Michael Wetzel  Identity Verified
Германия
Local time: 23:57
немецкий => английский
Definition of translation Apr 19, 2011

Hello,
What's the term again? I believe it is "useful idiot". Writing texts like this is the best thing anyone can do to help professional translators realize that at least a little bit of theory is necessary and productive.

"1. Translation – This applies to fairly literal, “word for word.” This is often out of necessity. If you want to make sure that a person in Japan understands how to use a product (such as a medical device), it is important that the source and targ
... See more
Hello,
What's the term again? I believe it is "useful idiot". Writing texts like this is the best thing anyone can do to help professional translators realize that at least a little bit of theory is necessary and productive.

"1. Translation – This applies to fairly literal, “word for word.” This is often out of necessity. If you want to make sure that a person in Japan understands how to use a product (such as a medical device), it is important that the source and target-language text match up precisely."

Such "interlinear translations" may play a useful role in the translation of religious texts, but every translator (and client) has read enough interlinear translations of instruction manuals to know that the exact opposite is the case for almost every other type of text.

I also seriously doubt that the definitions of "internationalization" and "globalization" are typical: For me, these represent efforts to make texts as convincing as possible for a wide variety of native speakers (UK vs. US or the hundred varieties of Spanish, for example) or for a wide variety of non-native speakers.

I assume that this article is MT hype: that seems like a more convincing explanation of these "errors" than that the author was absolutely clueless.

Sincerely,
Michael
Collapse


 


To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator:

Модератор(ы) этого форума
Jared Tabor[Call to this topic]

You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request »

Translation vs. localization (and those other long words)







Pastey
Your smart companion app

Pastey is an innovative desktop application that bridges the gap between human expertise and artificial intelligence. With intuitive keyboard shortcuts, Pastey transforms your source text into AI-powered draft translations.

Find out more »
Wordfast Pro
Translation Memory Software for Any Platform

Exclusive discount for ProZ.com users! Save over 13% when purchasing Wordfast Pro through ProZ.com. Wordfast is the world's #1 provider of platform-independent Translation Memory software. Consistently ranked the most user-friendly and highest value

Buy now! »