>The history of Logos is potentially interesting >To begin, it would seem that the founders Bud Scott and >Charlie Byrne, and their first workers, belonged to a "Jesuit >sect" that lived on a "commune" somewhere near Middletown, >New York, USA. Presumably their primary motivation was >to support missionary work. >Another popular machine-translation group, Globalink, _may_ >have connections to Georgetown University (again Jesuit). >Again, corrections and more information would be welcome. >Very early MT work at Georgetown also led to the Systran MT system. And did not Ludovico Bertonio happened to be a JESUIT himself? And, of course, his work on Aymara was developed on a misionary basis. It must be a Jesuitic conspiration :) Alex
- [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Omar Beas
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Laura Jones
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Jorge P. Arpasi
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Laura Jones
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Alex Condori
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Ken Beesley
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Jorge P. Arpasi
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Laura Jones
- [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Alex Condori
- [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Omar Beas
- [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Omar Beas
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture aymar ccopacatty
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture David Sanchez
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture David Sanchez
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Laura Jones
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Ken Beesley
- Re: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Ken Beesley
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Alex Condori
- RE: [aymara] Aymara and Western Culture Alex Condori
