Microsoft
Helps Languages Talk Tech
Microsoft
on Monday took steps to
help local languages avoid
being lost on the ever-changing
computer technology landscape.
The list of languages supported
by the newest releases of
Windows, Office or Visual
Studio software includes
Yoruba in Nigeria, Oriya
in India, Tatar in Russia,
isiZulu in Africa, and Inuktitut
in Canada.
A full list
of languages was available
online at microsoft.com/llp.
The US software
giant also released 59 new
Language Interface Packs
for its latest-generation
Windows 7 operating system
and soon-to-be-released
Office 2010 programs.
“Allowing
for people to use and build
software in their native
language helps emerging
markets build a stronger
work force,” said
Microsoft government and
education programs senior
director Lauren Woodman.
She added
that the program “will
also help people bridge
the language gap and, for
the first time, use technology
in a meaningful way.”
The 95 languages
supported through a Local
Language Program translate
into more than a billion
people being able to work
with Windows and Office
in their native tongues,
according to Microsoft.
The firm cited
statistics indicating that,
on average, one of the more
than 7,000 languages in
the world dies every two
weeks.
Failure of
languages to grow with new
words for technology trends
and innovations can contribute
to their downfall.
Linguistic
diversity is under threat,”
Unesco director-general
director Irina Bokova said
in a release. “This
loss not only erodes individual
communities and cultures,
but more broadly, the very
makeup of our societies.