Comments on: Google, Facebook rush Iranian language support
To facilitate communication in Iran's native tongue, Google hastily adds translation support for Farsi, or Persian, while Facebook makes its site available to native speakers.
To facilitate communication in Iran's native tongue, Google hastily adds translation support for Farsi, or Persian, while Facebook makes its site available to native speakers.
Don't buy these one-trick ponies--unless you like gizmos that gather dust.
The Net giant, ever eager for a faster Internet, debuts its Google Public DNS service. With it, Google could become even more central to the Net.
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Great work!!!...
I've been a Twitter user since early 2007 but this is the first time I've been proud to be a part of it (you could read that many ways, but you know what I mean!)
It's amazing how a single uneducated person working for Fox, or NYT, or BBC can have so much influence in propagating incorrect information like this.
A bit of history: The Nazis ordered all Bulgarian Jews rounded up and 'relocated' into ghettos in major cities where they'd be easier to transport to death camps. The Bulgarian leaders pretended to misunderstand the meaning of 'relocate,' and ordered all Jews out of the cities into hundreds of small villages, where the Bulgarian people hid them. The result was that 80% of Bulgaria's Jews survived the Holocaust and most of the remaining 20% were in areas of the country that the Bulgarian government did not control. That's playing dumb.
And it is refreshing to see that for once conservatives, libertarians, and liberals have found common cause in aiding the Iranian people, along with the leaders of Germany and France who refreshingly aren't defending the status quo in the Middle East this time. (Maybe they did learn something from Iraq.) The only laggard seems to be Obama, who seems captivated by the image of himself flying into Teheran to meet with the man only he refers to as the nation's "Supreme Leader."
Too bad the Romans aren't around to revolt against an evil emperor like Nero. I've been trying for over a year to get Google Translate to include Latin. Books from a century and more ago are filled with Latin phrases, which they assume any literate person could understand.
- by lazycat202 June 21, 2009 7:34 AM PDT
- i'm so glad that i'm living in USA.
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(8 Comments)freedom of speech and freedom of expression