Hi Kelly, I have only done one or two Asian translations, so my memory is a little fuzzy. I am pretty sure you don't need to do anything to the Frame files. If I remember correctly, it's more of an operating system thing than a FrameMaker thing, so the agency's IT department will make sure that they can support Korean fonts. However, if you have to open and edit the files, you may need your IT department to make sure your system can support the Korean fonts.
Good Luck. ___________________________________________________________________________________ Yvonne Mills ▪ Technical Writer 2 ▪ JDSU-ComTest ▪ +1-540-378-1398 221 S Yorkshire St. Salem, VA 24153 USA -----Original Message----- From: Kelly Lawetz [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2012 9:51 AM To: Yvonne Mills Subject: RE: How to prepare Frame files for English to Korean translation Hi Yvonne, Thank you for your reply. We are keeping the screens in English for the moment and I have provide the glossary and the latest version of the guide. I'm working with a very small translation company and they are still on Framemaker 6! They just use Frame to convert to .mif and then import the files into Trados. What concerns me are the Korean fonts. Is there something I need to do on my end to the source files before I send them on for translation? Thanks, Kelly Lawetz Team Leader of Technical Documentation P: +1-514-332-4000 x6329 -----Original Message----- From: Yvonne Mills [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2012 9:37 AM To: Kelly Lawetz Cc: [email protected] Subject: RE: How to prepare Frame files for English to Korean translation Hi Kelly, Having done a few translation projects in the past, I've found a few tips to make the process a little smoother. There are probably other folks on the list that do translations on a regular basis and may have more info to offer. Assuming you are using a translation agency, you don't have to do anything with the FrameMaker files. They are familiar with FrameMaker, so the only thing you have to do is send them the native FrameMaker files, including the graphics (and tell them which version of FrameMaker you are using). The major things I have found that make both your and the translator's life easier: - Make sure your graphics directory only contains the graphics for that book (don't include old graphics or any related graphic/document that is not used in the book). - You may have to provide localized (Korean, in this case) screen shots. The graphics people at the agency can update diagrams and drawings (for a fee), but if they don't have access to the product to grab the screen shots, you may be asked to provide them. - Provide a Glossary. You mentioned Product names and Role names will not be translated. This is something to include in the glossary. Have a section that defines what to leave in English and then provide another section that defines acronyms (and specify whether translate them) and other terms they may need - for instance when you use the word FRAME make sure you tell them what that means: a packet of data, a window display, or something you put a picture in. - If your company has done translations before with a different vendor, make sure they have the translation memory from the previous translation. Those are the major ones. There may be other small things that I missed. Hope that helps. ___________________________________________________________________________________ Yvonne Mills ▪ Technical Writer 2 ▪ JDSU-ComTest ▪ +1-540-378-1398 221 S Yorkshire St. Salem, VA 24153 USA ___________________________________________________________________________________ Date: Tue, 19 Jun 2012 21:18:07 +0000 From: Kelly Lawetz <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Subject: How to prepare Frame files for English to Korean translation Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Hello Framers, How do I prepare my Frame files for translation to Korean? Product names and Role names will not be translated. The translator will convert Frame > mif 7.0 > Trados.ttx files and then back again. What do I need to do on my end before I send the files? Thanks in advance, Regards, Kelly Lawetz Team Leader of Technical Documentation [Description: cid:[email protected]] License Plate Recognition | Video Surveillance | Access Control P: +1-514-332-4000 x6329 | F: +1-514-332-1692 | [email protected]<mailto:%[email protected]> 2280, Alfred-Nobel Blvd, suite 400, Montreal, QC, H4S 2A4, Canada Explore your possibilities: www.genetec.com/possibilities<http://www.genetec.com/possibilities> Confidentiality Message | This e-mail message is confidential, may be privileged and is intended for the exclusive use of the addressee. Any other person is strictly prohibited from disclosing, distributing or reproducing it. If the addressee cannot be reached or is unknown to you, please inform the sender by return e-mail immediately and delete this e-mail message and destroy all copies. _______________________________________________ You are currently subscribed to framers as [email protected]. Send list messages to [email protected]. To unsubscribe send a blank email to [email protected] or visit http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/archive%40mail-archive.com Send administrative questions to [email protected]. Visit http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info.
