Hi everyone, We're of course discussing and it's only ideas. 2009/11/10 Kálmán Kéménczy <kkemenczy@opensuse.org>:
Hi Jean,
On Tue, Nov 10, 2009 at 1:24 PM, Jean Cayron <jean.cayron@gmail.com> wrote:
2009/11/7 Kálmán Kéménczy <kkemenczy@opensuse.org>
idea 5 We have to build l10n volunteers respect and community. I am not sure why we should deliver languages where translations are under 75%. (at Mozilla this is 100%). We have to contact to the translators and find out what happens and maybe we have find more/new volunteers.
That's not very respectfull for small or minority languages that strive to have the most translated they can, dealing with openSUSE, Gnome, KDE, Mozilla...
Try to find new volounteers does not always succeed. So what? Throw the language away? What's the point to have Yast 100% translated (even some very specific and technician parts) if half of the desktop is untranslated?
First of all, thanks for your feedback. I am just talking about ideas here. There are no decisions (and I am not the one who could or want decide anything alone).
About the translation percent. I am not talking about YaST, I am talking about the distribution we release. And now I see I was not clear. The localization is the hardest part when we are talking about a whole distribution. How can I say to a school, government or users that openSUSE is localized, when it's not. And we have no idea at all the l10n status of any release. We really don't know what is missing or what we have. The stat page is represent 5% (or less) of the distribution and this is not good overview.
I think we have to find out when we could say something is localized. Which components are key and where should we improve. Maybe we have to find new contributors on different languages where there was no commit for years.
On KDE, the language is released if the essentials are met: desktop_kdelibs.po : 75% desktop_l10n.po : 75% kdebase : 75% kdelibs4.po : 90%
These files/folders are about 20% of the whole KDE project but they are the core. The other parts are not evaluated for release.
On GNOME, they don't care.
According to the stats, following your idea would make 23 languages only. There are 60 languages translated on openSUSE. http://i18n.opensuse.org/stats/trunk/toplist.php
Speaking of my case, I'm very proud to have managed to come from 45% to 57% from 11.1 to 11.2 alone, despite I try to find other translators.
We should and we are proud of this effort as well.
And I work also on KDE and Firefox (with a very few other people). Should I give up or spend all my hometime translating it? Or stop translating KDE to be sure openSUSE gets 75%?
No, we should build community for each languages. The one man show not works well in the community development. I know but more you have speakers, more you have volunteers. And more you have systems/apps localised, more you attract people. It's a bit
In that case, the "Warning" made about Yast could be used for the whole thing but we should keep "developping" languages. It should be clear in the promotion (wiki, sale DVD...) what are the "full experience localised" languages. But there, the problem is how to "rate" it. Rating on a % of KDE, Gnome and openSUSE has no sens, as I said, want there are loads of small programs not widely used on both desktops. Essentials for KDE makes more sense. But again, openSUSE doesn't ship unofficial translations of KDE, so it's already the case. Other key applications are OpenOffice and Firefox. For these we can say: OK it's officially localised. For Gnome I don't have a clue of how to deal with it. Or it can be done on the packages shipped on the OSS repo. And what about GNU tools ;-) Idea: Yast: X % yes/no lcn: X % yes/no Gnome: ???? yes/no KDE: official KDE released language yes/no Firefox: official Firefox released language y/n OpenOffice: official released language y/n other important projects, application? How to make stats about all these projects? That's a lot of work to do for all languages, indeed and I'm not sure that scripty can do it. And there we don't speek about quality, only abou %age. I remembered having heard a sad story about a Mandriva based distro "Caxa Magica" or something similar that had a contract with Portuguese government for school computers. In their distro there was GCompris and it was translated in Portuguese by one of his creator, from Portuguese origin but living in France. Some translations were a bit "unusual" and the teachers made a fuzz about the "badly translated educational program", the press got involved and so on, despite the GCompris community brought a quality update on that translations within the week. It ended up a bit sadly with the educational minister explaining how to remove the "evil" application without mentioning that there was an update available... There is no good way, except feed-back from a release to another, to rate that. But again, if something is done, I'm for the warning, not the withdraw from the translations. the case for me now, some people start to propose their help because they've been attracted with a product.
Mozilla is far smaller in number of strings than openSUSE. Translations on openSUSE are far more work intensive than, for example, Mozilla or KDE want it's more technical and it includes the documentation in the GUI. They're several POT with weird name with not any explanation of what it's for on the web. Should I translate it badly to get the %age or should I leave it now untranslated?
imho, you are already know the answer for that. Bad translations are worst than no translations.
I can understand than some languages around the 20% or so are a bit "short" but for the others, please think about the consequences. If an "essential" requirement is set, it must be defined wisely and the POT files have to be cleaned up from some outdated pot's (kinternet for example...).
We are here to talk about it. And again, I am just one small piece of the list and I will not and can't judge anything. I just would like a conversations between us, how can we leverage the processes.
thanks kalman
No personal problem with you Kalman, if you pass and visit me in Belgium, I'll offer you a free homemade beer with pleasure ;-). Regards, Jean -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-translation+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-translation+help@opensuse.org