December 2008 Archives

In July of this year, WeLocalize launched the GlobalSight Open Source Initiative, offering the industry's first open source version of enterprise translation management software. WeLocalize plans to release open source GlobalSight in January, 2009, and is committed to supporting LISA standards Translation Memory eXchange (TMX) and Segmentation Rules eXchange 2.0 (SRX). GlobalSight also recently announced a partnership with ClayTablet Technologies to enable connectivity with content management systems.

Is this just another marketing initiative searching for a way to differentiate common technology? Early indications are that there's a real movement afoot. Over 200 people from 147 companies have joined this open source community, and the steering committee contains many high-tech leaders, including Cisco, EMC, IBM, Autodesk, NetApp, and Sun Microsystems. Sun, for example, has a long history of embracing open standards and open source. Sun has staked its future repeatedly on open standards and open sources, ranging from the early days of UNIX and Java to today's OpenSolaris, OpenOffice, Java, and, now, Open Translation centering on XLIFF standards.

To be sure, this is an impressive list of companies. But the basis of these companies' interest is not entirely clear, and the adoption history for open source solutions across the value chain of content technologies has been fragmented at best. Open source content management software is still in the early stages of acceptance and open source authoring software has yet to take significant market share.

In the end, global corporations and organizations determine value and standards. So we put the question to you: WOULD YOU CONSIDER ADOPTING OPEN SOURCE TRANSLATION, AND WHY? Please comment on this blog or send me email with your ideas. Let's continue this conversation...

We are pleased to announce the Content Globalization Practice's newest case study: Broadening Product Lifecycle Management: Club Car's Strategy for Multilingual Product Communications, sponsored by Sajan.

The case study describes how Ingersoll Rand Club Car introduced and continues to strengthen a Global Content Value Chain (GCVC) focused on product content:

ProdContent GCVC Web.png

The largest manufacturer of golf cars and utility vehicles in the world, Club Car is a shining example of Ingersoll Rand's commitment to deliver product innovation from all perspectives.

Operational champions from technical publications groups take note! This is truly an impressive story. Download here.

Spot on!

The title of my colleague Natasja Paulssen's presentation during the Optimizing the Global Content Value Chain: Focus on Product Content session @Gilbane Boston 08.

Based on impressive results achieved between Philips and Ordina, Paulssen is specifically referring to Support and Marketing collaboration, but as the results showed... a whole lot more.

Natasja extract.png

Who would have thought? Shared consumer care content including user manuals, service manuals, service scenarios, FAQ's, tips & tricks, and instructional videos within a spectacular web site available in 52+ languages. It can be done. It will be done.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from December 2008 listed from newest to oldest.

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January 2009 is the next archive.

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