Monday 17 November 2014

Conversation topic for 18/11: Language of business

Translation tech helps firms talk business round the world 

English is the language of business, right? Er... not really.
If the oft-heard maxim were universally true, the outsourced translation market wouldn't be worth a chunky $37bn (£23bn) or be growing at about 6% a year.
While content in English still dominates the web, "billions of people don't read English at all or well enough to make buying decisions," concludes a survey by Common Sense Advisory, a business research consultancy.
In reality, businesses must translate and localise products into a host of different languages, and that requires linguists.
And with competition among translation firms fierce, many are turning to technology to steal a march on their rivals.
Found in translation

Take Thebigword, a Leeds-based firm employing about 12,000 linguists in 73 countries covering 500 languages. Its previous clients include Ricoh, Electrolux and DHL.
The firm says it can connect you with an interpreter in just 31 seconds by phone, localise your market messages or translate your documents.
However, it believes the real weapon in its technological arsenal is its new "translation management system" (TMS), which claims to deliver projects four times faster than the industry standard by automating project workflow and using computer-assisted translation tools.
Imagine you are a technology business launching a new phone in multiple countries on the same day.
"Translation for a job like that goes through a huge amount of different processes - it's not just one page sent, translate it and send it back," says chief executive Larry Gould.
"It may have diagrams on it or illustrations, or need to be presented a certain way, localised, edited and double-proofed. And of course you've got to do it all to tight deadlines."
Mr Gould can use up to 200 linguists on a single project like this, spread across 33 countries. But the TMS helps co-ordinate the process, allocating the workload across time zones to speed things up and cut costs.
Language barrier?
Such firms still rely heavily on human linguists but are increasingly complementing them with lower-cost automated "machine translation" tools, known as MT in the business.
Ben Sargent, a senior analyst at Common Sense, says such technology has its drawbacks, but can work well for low-stakes, high-volume work, particularly online.
"We estimate that less than half of 1% of all the digital content that could and should be translated, actually is.
"No-one has the budget to do all that. So in low-value content applications, like user-generated content and consumer-to-consumer interactions, automated translation gets a lot more traction."
For example, when eBay realised that more than 20% of its sales involved cross-border trade - and that its international business was growing faster than its domestic business - it acquired AppTek's machine translation technology to help meet the demand for local language listings.
Currently eBay only translates listings in countries such as Brazil and Russia, but eventually wants to help sellers list their goods in multiple languages, and chat to buyers via instant messaging that translates in real time.
But Ryan Frankel, chief executive of VerbalizeIt, a translation firm that uses only human translators, is not convinced by MT.
He believes that it "is light years away" from delivering anything beyond a "get the gist" solution.
"Businesses rightly value accuracy but also brand, industry and cultural-specific terminology and nuances that require an experienced and trained community of translation professionals."
Even advocates of the technology admit that an accuracy rate of about 70% is considered excellent, but that this can only usually be achieved for technical documents using highly consistent terminology.
Once the slang phrases, idioms and metaphors of normal human conversation are thrown into the mix, accuracy can plummet to 30%.
Beam me up Scotty

"Speech-to-speech" technology, which translates the human voice in near real time into text or words spoken by your computer, offers some exciting possibilities.
Although it is certainly in its early stages - Microsoft's pre-beta Skype Translator tool, unveiled in May, was clunky and slow in demonstration to say the least - speech-to-speech is evolving fast.
According to analyst Gartner the market is likely to mature in the next five to 10 years.
SpeechTrans, a frontrunner in the space, claims its users can have a conversation in more than 40 languages over fixed-line or internet phone, and that the technology can even recognise different accents and dialects.
"In four years we have been able to accomplish more than was ever thought possible in this area of technology," says Mark Coviello, director of sales.
"At this rate we foresee the ability for any human being to communicate with any other human being without error [using speech-to-speech]."
Hewlett-Packard has already integrated SpeechTrans into MyRoom, its web conferencing platform, enabling business professionals "anywhere in the world to collaborate in 30 different languages, in the same conversation, at the same time".
The technology giant won't tell the BBC how many users it has, but says "adoption is increasing", along with the application's accuracy and speed.
'Dubious results'

Still, Mr Sargent says such platforms have a long way to go before they really take off.
"Progress can be slow, and the utility of these systems today is limited.
"Don't expect to see courtroom or hospital interpreters being replaced anytime soon, except for emergency situations, where dubious results may still be better than nothing."
As with MT, some also doubt whether speech-to-speech will ever really grasp the nuances of language the way a human can. Still, Mr Coviello claims taking humans out of the equation has its benefits, too.
"We find that there may not always be a person available for translation when needed the most, or that due to certain ideologies or conditions the person translating may mistranslate what is being said."
While businesses will surely explore automated translation technology for its cost-saving potential, it seems that demand for high-quality human translation will continue to grow as multilingual content proliferates.
"We believe new technology has to be embraced because there is just so much communication required out there," says Thebigword's Mr Gould.
"It's brilliant for our industry - [technology] will enhance our business, not take away from it."
Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/business-29985865

Conversation topic for 18/11: Space exploration

Space agency says Philae completes primary mission

The image released by the European Space Agency ESA on Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 shows an artist rendering by the ATG medialab depicting lander Philae separating from Rosetta mother spaceship and descending to the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. European Space Agency said Wednesday that the landing craft separated from Rosetta probe for descent to comet 67P. (AP Photo/ESA, ATG Medialab)
The image released by the European Space Agency ESA on Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014 shows an artist rendering by the ATG medialab depicting lander Philae separating from Rosetta mother spaceship and descending to the surface of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. European Space Agency said Wednesday that the landing craft separated from Rosetta probe for descent to comet 67P. (AP Photo/ESA, ATG Medialab)
BERLIN (AP) — The pioneering lander Philae completed its primary mission of exploring the comet’s surface and returned plenty of data before depleted batteries forced it to go silent, the European Space Agency said Saturday.
“All of our instruments could be operated and now it’s time to see what we got,” ESA’s blog quoted lander manager Stephan Ulamec as saying.
Since landing Wednesday on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko some 311 million miles (500 million kilometers) away, the lander has performed a series of scientific tests and sent reams of data, including photos, back to Earth.
In addition, the lander was lifted on Friday by about 4 centimeters (1.5 inches) and rotated about 35 degrees in an effort to pull it out of a shadow so that solar panels could recharge the depleted batteries, ESA’s blog said.
ESA spokesman Bernard von Weyhe on Saturday confirmed the lander’s difficult rotation operation. It’s still unclear whether it succeeded in putting the solar panels out of the shade.
Even if the lander was rotated successfully and is able to recharge its batteries with sunlight, it may take weeks or months until it will send out new signals. Regular checks for signals will continue.
The agency did not schedule any media briefings on Saturday.
ESA’s mission control center in Darmstadt, Germany, received the last signals from Philae on Saturday morning at 0036 GMT (7:36 p.m. EST Friday). Before the signal died, the lander returned all of its housekeeping data as well as scientific data of its experiments on the surface — which means it completed the measures as planned, the ESA blog said.
During a scheduled listening effort on Saturday at 1000GMT, ESA received no signals from Philae, ESA’s mission chief Paolo Ferri told The Associated Press.
“We don’t know if the charge will ever be high enough to operate the lander again,” Ferri had told The AP ahead of the 1000GMT (5 a.m. EST) listening time. “It is highly unlikely that we will establish any kind of communication any time soon.”
Now it’s up to ESA’s team of scientists to evaluate the data and find out whether the experiments were successful — especially a complex operation Friday in which the lander was given commands to drill a 25-centimeter (10-inch) hole into the comet and pull out a sample for analysis.
“We know that all the movements of the operation were performed and all the data was sent down” to ESA, Ferri said Saturday. “However, at this point we do not even know if it really succeeded and if it (the drill) even touched the ground during the drilling operation.”
Material beneath the surface of the comet has remained almost unchanged for 4.5 billion years, so the samples would be a cosmic time capsule that scientists are eager to study.
The lander did already return images of the comet’s surface that show “it is covered by dust and debris ranging from millimeter to meter sizes,” while “panoramic images show layered walls of harder material,” ESA’s blog stated.
The science teams are now studying their data to see if they have succeeded in sampling any of this material with Philae’s drill.
Beyond analyzing the new data, scientists are also still trying to find the exact spot where Philae landed on Wednesday.
“The search for Philae’s final landing site continues, with high-resolution images from the orbiter being closely scrutinized,” the blog said.
Scientists hope the $1.6 billion (1.3 billion-euro) project will help answer questions about the origins of the universe and life on Earth.
One of the things scientists are most excited about is the possibility that the mission might help confirm that comets brought the building blocks of life — organic matter and water — to Earth. They already know that comets contain amino acids, a key component of cells. Finding the right kind of amino acids and water would be an important hint that life on Earth did come from space.
“The data collected by Philae and Rosetta is set to make this mission a game-changer in cometary science,” Matt Taylor, ESA’s Rosetta project scientist, was quoted as saying on the blog. 
Source: http://wtnh.com/2014/11/15/space-agency-says-philae-completes-primary-mission/

Conversation topic for 18/11: Google Glass

As Developers Depart, Google Glass Is Ready To Become This Era’s Segway 



Just over 18 months ago Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said he found having to talk to Google Glass out loud “the weirdest thing” and admitted that there would be “places where Google Glass are inappropriate.” Well, hello! I think the average person could have told Google this long before they spent millions developing the thing, and as I wrote at the time, the product was simply incapable of becoming a mass-market device. I predicted it would become this era’s Segway: hyped as a game changer but ultimately used by warehouse workers and mall cops. Indeed, Glass might well be our surveillance era’s perfect pairing.
Now Reuters has uncovered clear evidence that app developers are dropping the device.
Nine of the 16 app Glass app makers that Reuters contacted admitted they’d abandoned their efforts. Meanwhile, “The Glass Collective,” a venture fund backing Glass apps has gone and now redirects to the Glass page, while three of Google’s key employees on the Glass team have departed.
Admittedly, Facebook and OpenTable are among the larger developers persevering with Glass and remain two of the 100 apps on the official Glass web site — though the official Twitter app has been withdrawn.
Meanwhile, Google co-founder Sergey Brin recently went to a red-carpet event without his normally ever-present Glass. Signs the product is ready for the chop?
Reuter’s sources say a full consumer launch may now be “delayed” to 2015. Google’s people say a consumer launch is still on.
But I think we can safely say that, even if Google did launch it to consumers, the simplest thing for Google to do now would be to release the underlying technology for startups to hack around with.
Industrial applications – building and manufacturing, security, training – could be the future for Glass. Indeed, Taco Bell and KFC are considering Glass as a potential training method for employees. And five developers that have joined the programme are all in the enterprise space.
Source: http://techcrunch.com/2014/11/15/as-developers-depart-google-glass-is-ready-to-become-this-eras-segway/?ncid=rss&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Techcrunch+%28TechCrunch%29

Goodbye red carpet, hello Mall Cops and McDonald’s.