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Free software portal; Project Anuvaad is an open-source Document Translation platform to translate documents in Indic languages at scale. Anuvaad provides editing capabilities with maker-checker flow along with plug & play NMT models.
DeepL for Windows translating from Polish to French. The translator can be used for free with a limit of 1,500 characters per translation. Microsoft Word and PowerPoint files in Office Open XML file formats (.docx and .pptx) and PDF files up to 5MB in size can also be translated.
It was only available as a smartphone app but it has since launched its own website and has expanded to other languages. [1] From November 2019, Papago was changed to be available without Internet service. [2] In 2020, the image translation function was introduced, and text in photos can be translated directly. [3]
Google Translate is a multilingual neural machine translation service developed by Google to translate text, documents and websites from one language into another. It offers a website interface, a mobile app for Android and iOS, as well as an API that helps developers build browser extensions and software applications. [3]
Pinaak is a non-government charitable society devoted to Indic language computing. It works for software localization, developing language software, localizing open source software, enriching online encyclopedias etc. In addition to this Pinaak works for educating people about computing, ethical use of Internet and use of Indian languages on ...
Since its founding Reverso has provided machine translation tools for automated translation of texts in various languages, including neural machine translation. Reverso Context is an online and mobile application combining big data from large multilingual corpora to allow users to search for translations in context.
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%).
However, the Google Translation Toolkit turned out to be a less ambitious product: "document rather than project-based, intended not as a process management package but simply another personal translation memory tool". [3] Originally the Google Translator Toolkit was meant to attract collaboratively minded people, such as those who translate ...