hotels in Paris, apartments in Paris, Paris hotels, Paris apartments, Paris France hotels, Paris France apartments in Paris

Info

5 star hotels
4 star hotels
3 star hotels
2 star hotels
Hostels
Apartments
Pensions

Hotels in the centre
Hotels near the centre
Hotels outside of the centre

Airport transfers
Sightseeing tours
Guide
News
Travel Links


News

14.08.2008 - Mozilla plans Luganda web search

Internet search engine Mozilla Firefox has launched a project in Uganda to translate its searches into the local Luganda language.
Once complete, the search engine will enable Luganda speakers to search on the internet.

The Czech Republic news are represented by www.paristravelguide.info


About five million Ugandans speak Luganda, the most widely spoken language after English and Kiswahili.
The Baganda are the largest of Uganda's almost 40 ethnic groups, making up more than 16% of the population.
The project is being undertaken in collaboration with Uganda's Makerere University, South Africa's Rhodes University and Translate.org.za, a non-profit organisation.
Basic words
The MP anger at Uganda royal arrests ...
Call for BBC Television Centre to be a grade II listed building ...
Gay arrests in Uganda condemned ...
Prague Fringe Festival gets underway on Sunday ...
BBC's Joshua Mmali in Kampala says 120 software engineers and 120 language specialists held a one-day workshop in the capital, Kampala, to work on the project.
Basic words have been translated into Luganda in the first stages of the month-long project, our correspondent says.
Venacious Baryamureba, the dean of Makerere's Faculty of Computing and Information Technology, said the project would increase the number of people using computers in Uganda.
"Everything is available in English and there are people who know Luganda, who can read Luganda but cannot read English. So it's a step towards localising most of these things into local content."
Our correspondent says Ugandans are looking forward to using Luganda and other local languages to search for information on the internet.
Microsoft launched its Windows and Office software in Kiswahili - which is spoken by more than 110 million people across eastern and central Africa - in 2005.
Language experts from Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zanzibar as well as the Great Lakes and the Democratic Republic of Congo developed a common glossary for the software.

(BBC)


<< Back

Search

Check-in
 
Check-out
 
Room
Class
Location



 
 
Copyright © 1999 - 2009 ParisTravelGuide.info. All Rights Reserved    
www.Budapest-Hotels-Apartments.com
_______________________________