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Babylon is a computer dictionary and translation program developed by the Israeli company Babylon Software Ltd. based in the city of Or Yehuda.The company was established in 1997 by the Israeli entrepreneur Amnon Ovadia.
Trados Studio is a computer-assisted translation software tool which provides a comprehensive platform for translation tasks, including editing, reviewing, and project management. It is available both as a local desktop tool or online. Trados, owned by RWS, also provides a suite of intelligent machine translation products.
Pootle - an online translation tool; open-tran - providing translation memory lookup (was shut down on January 31, 2014.) [3] Wordforge (old name Pootling) - an offline translation tool for Windows and Linux; Rosetta - free translation web service offered by LaunchPad. It is used mainly by the Ubuntu community translation tool.
OmegaT is another translation tool that can translate PO files. It is written in Java so it is available for multiple platforms (including Linux and Windows). It can be downloaded from SourceForge. GNU Gettext (Linux/Unix) used for the GNU Translation Project. Gettext also provides msgmerge that makes merging translations easy.
Free, commercial (varies by plan) 3.0: No: 50+ Both rule-based and statistical models developed by IBM Research. Neural machine translation models available through the Watson Language Translator API for developers. [4] [5] Microsoft Translator: Cross-platform (web application) SaaS: No fee required: Final: No: 100+ Statistical and neural ...
A number of computer-assisted translation software and websites exists for various platforms and access types. According to a 2006 survey undertaken by Imperial College of 874 translation professionals from 54 countries, primary tool usage was reported as follows: Trados (35%), Wordfast (17%), Déjà Vu (16%), SDL Trados 2006 (15%), SDLX (4%), STAR Transit [fr; sv] (3%), OmegaT (3%), others (7%).
The first version of Déjà Vu was published in 1993 and used the Microsoft Word interface. In 1996, this approach was abandoned, and the software was given its own program interface. In 2004, the founder Emilio Benito died [2] and his son, Daniel Benito, Head of R&D and Déjà Vu co-creator, continued running the company. Beginning in March ...
- Software Development - JavaScript - JSON - Java Properties - PHP Arrays - PO (Portable Objects) - RC (Windows C/C++ Resources) - ResX (Windows .NET Resources) - TS (Qt Linguist translation source) Open API: Yes Has a command line interface for using main features in batch mode.