Many of my business contacts mix up Machine Translation System with Translation Memory System. What does each do? Who is it meant for? What can you expect from both technologies? How are they used? We thought it was time to give those questions a clear answer…
As wikipedia puts it, "Machine Translation (MT) performs simple substitution of […] words in one natural language for words in another". It is commonly used today to give you a rough idea of the meaning of a (web) page or message published in a language you do not understand. If, in turn, you have an email message machine-translated in Chinese before sending it to your new holiday friend, this new acquaintance is likely to hate you for all those noughty words you threw at him…
Professional uses of Machine Translation for qualitative marketing communication is therefore not recommended. For those however who need to communicate into or from an unknown foreign language, following the NIST 2006 Machine Translation Evaluation list, Google is offering the best machine translation engine. Other well known commercial MT tools are Babel Fish, Systran and Worldlingo.
Since current MT systems are unable to produce output of the same quality as a human translator, the latter remains key to obtain professional results. Fortunately enough, Translations Memory Systems and Computer Assisted Translation (CAT) systems are here today to make his job faster, better, more reliable and cheaper.
Database-stored translation memories (TM’s) consist of text segments in a source language and their (validated) translations into one or more target languages. CAT tools feed TM’s and automatically retrieve existing translations to speed up the localisation process and make it more dependable. Commercial widely used TM’s and CAT tools are for exampleTrados, DéjàVu, Wordfast and SDLX.
At Connexion we have closed the gap between websites and Translation Memory Systems, by developing a platform that combines web content management and CAT tools, for perfectly and totally translated web content.
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As in the corporate world, online privacy is something that will always be a tricky thing. Your boss thinks he can monitor all your moves to protect his company from spies, virusses or lazy employees. The 'lazy' employee on the other hand believes he should be trusted with the responsibility to decide for himself if he's harming the company or not...



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