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ASD-STE100 Simplified Technical English (STE) is a controlled language designed to simplify and clarify technical documentation. It was originally developed during the 1980's by the European Association of Aerospace Industries (AECMA), at the request of the European Airline industry, who wanted a standardized form of English for technical documentation that could be easily understood by non ...
The organisation serves as a lobbying group and policy advocate for the industry within the European Union establishment, [3] in particular the European Defence Agency, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, as well as the European Union Agency for the Space Programme.
There is a patch folder, but no official numbered patch and it only contains an updated data dictionary. 2.1 29 February 2004 SGML/XML DTD, XML schema 2.2 01 May 2005 SGML/XML DTD, XML schema 2.2.1 dated 01 May 2006 (XML schema only) 2.3 28 February 2007 SGML/XML DTD, XML schema 2.3.1 dated 01 February 2009 (various schema problems fixed) 3.0
Though it is developed by the GNOME project, it is the most popular screen reader for Unix like systems with graphical environments other than GNOME, like KDE or Unity. PC-Talker Kochi System Development Windows Commercial Japanese screen reader. Supports MSAA and Flash. [1] PCVoz EzHermatic Windows Commercial Available to buy or download trial.
1 AECMA Simplified English Guide (first release in 1986) which, in 2005, became the ASD Simplified Technical English Specification, ASD-STE100. 1 comment Toggle the table of contents
Pleco allows different ways of input, including Pinyin input method, English words, handwriting recognition and optical character recognition. [2] [3] It has many sets of dictionaries (including the Oxford, Longman, FLTRP, and Ricci), audio recordings from two different native speakers, flashcards functionality, and a document reader that can look up words in a document. [4]
Simplified Universal Player Encoder & Recorder (SUPER) is a closed-source front end for open-source software video players and encoders provided by the FFmpeg, MEncoder, MPlayer, x264, ffmpeg2theora, musepack, Monkey's Audio, True Audio, WavPack, libavcodec, and the Theora/Vorbis RealProducer plugIn projects. It was first released in 2005.
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. Its IPO took place ten years later.