language traditional chinese
Microsoft launches extra-strength Tablets
News Tablet PC's handwriting recogniser also gets new language support for Iberian Spanish, in addition to the already available English, French, German, Japanese, Korean, simplified Chinese and traditional Chinese. [13 Mar 2003]
HP-UX 9.x - 11i Internationalization Features White Paper
White Paper For alphabets of more than 256 characters, such as Traditional Chinese or Kanji, multi-byte character codes are required. The purpose of this document is to present the changes made to the Native Language Support features in the various releases of... [03 Jul 2008]
Things You Can Do and Say With Speech Recognition
White Paper This feature is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English (U.S.and Japanese language versions of Microsoft Office. When one uses Office speech recognition, one will switch between working in Voice Command mode and Dictation... [16 Apr 2008]
Using Speech Recognition With Different Languages in Office
White Paper This feature of using speech recognition with different languages in Office is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English (U.S.and Japanese language versions of Microsoft Office 2003 and in the Simplified Chinese, English (U... [16 Apr 2008]
Troubleshoot Speech Recognition
White Paper This feature of Troubleshoot speech recognition is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English (U.S.and Japanese language versions of Microsoft Office. Speech recognition is on when the microphone is turned on, and one can see... [16 Apr 2008]
Inside offshoring: Which country and partner to choose?
Comment Infosys is also investing $5m in a Chinese subsidiary that will provide services for global multinational clients as well as the domestic Chinese market. India still dominates the market as first choice when it comes to offshoring, particularly for... [11 Jun 2004]
Dan's China diary - day 4
Comment I'm curious to see what a Chinese, possibly underground, gay club is like - but I'm not that curious, so we call it a day. It's something I feel I've heard a hundred times before in Chinese restaurants but I've never really listened. [13 Jun 2006]
About Handwriting Recognition
White Paper This feature is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English, Japanese, and Korean language versions of Microsoft Office. Because handwriting recognition is not installed by default in all of these languages, one may need to... [16 Apr 2008]
Use Handwriting Recognition
White Paper This feature of Use handwriting recognition is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English, Japanese, and Korean language versions of Microsoft Office. Because handwriting recognition is not installed by default in all of... [16 Apr 2008]
Troubleshoot Handwriting Recognition
White Paper This feature of Troubleshoot handwriting recognition is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English, Japanese, and Korean language versions of Microsoft Office. Because handwriting recognition is not installed by default in... [16 Apr 2008]
About Speech Recognition
White Paper This feature is available in the Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English (U.S.and Japanese language versions of Microsoft Office. Speech recognition is installed in all Office programs by initially using the feature in Microsoft Word, or... [16 Apr 2008]
The Brampton Factor: Software costs under pressure
Comment Another potential weakness in the Gartner proposition is the strong likelihood the 'Chinese Effect', which has brought down the cost of many manufactured goods, is about to go into reverse. Even with the phenomenal numbers of qualified people... [22 Nov 2007]
2006: Mature offshoring, mainstream open source and more
News 2006 will give rise to sophisticated attitudes towards offshoring, mainstream adoption of open source software - and more controversy of the sort Google raised by censoring its Chinese search results. [02 Feb 2006]
Asian characters take naming to a new domain
News Domain name registrars are now accepting names with Chinese, Japanese and Korean characters which means web addresses, currently limited to the ASCII set of 37 characters, now have over 40,000 characters available. [13 Nov 2000]
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