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How Do you Say Jibbigo in Japanese?

In an age of seamless global connectivity thanks to increasingly powerful network services, it seems that the last remaining communication obstacle is language. Aside from the actual costs, travel across the globe in a day is no longer a problem, while high quality, instant, audio-visual communication is quickly becoming a matter of clicking a button on a tablet or smartphone. Language, on the other hand, still limits how we communicate. Tourists and travelers often face a hard time communicating with others if the two do not speak a common language. Of course, there is always the good old pocket dictionary, but anyone who has ever tried to rely on that while on vacation knows that it’s hardly any help. Free online translation tools also have limited usage. They require a computing device, an Internet connection, and the ability to enter and read a language that you don’t speak!

Fortunately, if you don’t speak a word of French and are planning a trip to see the Mona Lisa, or if you regularly need simultaneous interpretation in a work setting, Jibbigo can make your life easier. Jibbigo is a speech-to-speech translation app that works on Android and iOS operated devices. To use the application, you simply record what you need to translate while pressing a record button. Jibbigo then says it back in the target language. The application is currently available in nine language pairs. Jibbigo can translate between English and Arabic (Iraqi dialect), Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Korean and Tagalog. It can also translate between German and Spanish.

Jibbigo uses advanced Speech Recognition Technology and has a vocabulary of over 40,000 words. The apps’ website states that it uses statistical machine translation and natural voice output using SVOX speech synthesis technology.

Perhaps the most intriguing feature of Jibbigo is that it works offline without an Internet connection. It is self-contained and does not rely on cloud computing or other services that require a connection. This is especially useful for tourists who do not have access to Internet tech support or who do not want to get billed with massive roaming charges.

The app is founded on advanced scientific research in language at Mobile Technologies. Jibbigo and Mobile Technologies, in turn, continually collaborate with InterACT, the International Center for Advanced Communication Technologies at Carnegie Mellon University and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany.

The New York Times has praised the app as one of the most advanced on the market, and it has been featured in travel guides. The app is quite inexpensive, costing under $5 for most languages. For a few bucks, it might even be fun to just buy the app and test it out at home.

About RESCUECOM:

RESCUECOM provides computer repair and computer support, 24/7: Meeting every tech support need including data recovery, virus removal, networking, wireless services, and computer support for all brands of hardware and software. For computer support or information on products, services, or computer repair, visit https://www.rescuecom.com or call 1-800-RESCUE-PC.

For More Information, Contact:

David Milman, CEO

315-882-1100

david@rescuecom.com


Blog on What Ye Want, Just not News

Over the past few years, blogs have become a standard online entity. Thanks to a variety of free blogging interfaces, anyone with an interest in writing for the public may do so. People blog on everything from sports to technology to politics to cat grooming to education. For the average Internet user this probably marks a positive transformation towards a more egalitarian cyber landscape in which everyone has a chance to speak. Prior to the rise of Twitter “reporting,” blogs were the most significant outlet for i-reporting, news and event reporting done by the average, untrained individual. However, from the perspective of the media gatekeepers, those whom we used to entrust with filtering news as it passed through the gates of the media, the rise of the blogging culture marks a dangerous transformation in the public’s relationship to news.

First of all, because blogs vary so drastically in content and purpose, it is impossible to discuss the entire blogosphere as one giant lump. This is why it is important to make distinctions between problematic pseudo-news blogs and other, helpful, and entertaining, blogs. Perhaps the only problematic type of blog is the one that attempts to inform on public affairs and events, often trying to demand the same authority as news outlets. Other kinds like opinion, computer support, film, arts, and environment blogs are, for the most part, great.

Most blogging activity does in fact signify the proliferation of the public voice in previously elite areas. Now the casual citizen can talk about politics; the avid gardening fan can give soil advice; the ambitious cook can document her journey cooking through Julia Child’s recipes. The problem emerges when ordinary people try to cover serious, national, and world news in lieu of traditional news reporting. As people’s mistrust of large corporations expands to include news agencies, many look elsewhere for their news, which is one reason i-reporting is so appealing—it’s reporting from the people for the people. In truth though, this is an absurd dynamic. The “people” simply do not have the same training or resources as professional journalists.

To keep up with these trends in news blogging, traditional news reporters are often forced to maintain their own blogs. Though harmless on the surface, this phenomenon defies the traditionally staunch separation of news and opinion. In many ways, by opining on the same topics on which they report, journalists are committing the same industry faux pas as registering with a political party, something that is generally not permitted for reporters in order to ensure fair and unbiased reporting.

In the end, the dynamics of blogging are still emerging, so we have to carefully interact with this relatively modern aspect of the cyber world until it takes a stable form. When it comes to news, there’s still no alternative to real news sources like The New York Times, the BBC, or CNN. Simply put, these institutions spend lots of money covering the news accurately and efficiently. Bloggers have no primary contact with news, and don’t have the resources that newspapers and television reporters do.

About RESCUECOM:

RESCUECOM provides computer repair and computer support, 24/7: Meeting every tech support need including data recovery, virus removal, networking, wireless services, and computer support for all brands of hardware and software. For computer support or information on products, services, or computer repair, visit https://www.rescuecom.com or call 1-800-RESCUE-PC.

For More Information, Contact:

David Milman, CEO

315-882-1100

david@rescuecom.com


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Patented - Patent Numbers: 6,898,435, 8,832,424 and 9,477,488
Additional Patents Pending