Gábor Szabó wrote:
Guidelines are good.
It would be also good to have a non-exclusive list of applications
available on-line that
potential applicants should consider. Not to say they cannot bring
their own ideas but a
recommended list of application can a good thing anyway.

Who does the ISOC project and specifically the HaMakor support of it
want to attract?
- Professional translators?
- Translators who might not have projects to fill all their time?

> - Programmers who would like to do translation work?
- Students of CS or similar who are not yet involced in OS?
I'm afraid these two make as much sense as hiring marketing people to develop software. I'm sure there are some marketing people who have some programming background, and a smaller subset who might even be able to turn out a decent working program, there's a huge difference in quality between the outut of a skilled professional and the output of someone who isn't.

- Lingusitics students who plan to do translation work but might not have huge
   (or any) computer background?

Gabor


--
Thanks,
Uri
http://translation.israel.net


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