Showing posts with label Language. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Language. Show all posts
Thursday, March 19, 2015
Windows 10 coming in 190 countries, 111 languages
WASHINGTON — Microsoft says its new Windows 10 operating system will be coming “this summer” in 190 countries and 111 languages.
In a blog post late Tuesday, Microsoft executive vice president Terry Myerson said the operating system designed for multiple devices would also have a “small footprint” for connected devices.
“We continue to make great development progress and shared today that Windows 10 will be available this summer in 190 countries and 111 languages,” he said.
Microsoft has yet to provide a precise date for the launch of the operating system, which is aimed at powering PCs,smartphones and also connected devices such as bank machines and medical equipment.
“For the first time, a new version of Windows for small footprint IoT (Internet of Things) devices will be available — for free — when Windows 10 launches,” Myerson said.
“Windows 10 will offer versions of Windows for a diverse set of IoT devices, ranging from powerful devices like ATMs and ultrasound machines, to resource constrained devices like gateways.”
Microsoft is also working with fast-growing Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi to test Windows 10 on its devices.
The US tech giant also announced partnerships with Chinese-based Tencent and Lenovo to help customers in China upgrade to Windows 10.
The company also said Tuesday that Windows 10 will allow users to sign in to a device without a password by using biometrics, including facial recognition.
source: interaksyon.com
Saturday, December 8, 2012
‘Gangnam Style’ singer Psy apologizes for past anti-US songs
LOS ANGELES – The South Korean pop singer behind the viral smash hit “Gangnam Style” apologized on Friday for past concerts featuring anti-American lyrics, ahead of a holiday performance to be attended by U.S. President Barack Obama and his family.
Psy issued the apology after reports surfaced in the United States on Friday about his participation in two performances critical of the US military in 2004.
Psy’s “Gangnam Style” Korean pop and dance video is now the most-watched video ever on YouTube, with more than 900 million views since it was first uploaded in July.
“While I’m grateful for the freedom to express one’s self, I’ve learned there are limits to what language is appropriate and I’m deeply sorry for how these lyrics could be interpreted,” the rapper said in a statement.
“I will forever be sorry for any pain I have caused by those words,” he added.
In one performance, which Psy said was from eight years ago, the rapper protested the deaths of two teenage South Korean girls who were run over by a US tank stationed in the country.
In a separate performance, Psy was critical of the US-led invasion of Iraq and its occupation, in which South Korean forces participated.
Psy is scheduled to perform at the annual “Christmas in Washington” television special that will also be attended by Obama and his family, the White House said on Friday. Broadcaster TNT said Psy would still perform as planned.
source: interaksyon.com
Thursday, November 22, 2012
The problem with English-speaking Filipinos
Pardon the irony, but if there’s one trait Filipinos are proud of as a people, it is their capacity to speak a foreign language. Speaking fluent English is our country’s strategic edge that has attracted foreign investors to set up companies and outsource labor. These past few months, we received recognition from the Global English Corporation as the world’s best in Business English proficiency. We have also been branded as the world’s most affordable English teacher, according to BBC. Finally, schools like Ateneo, UP, and La Salle have made it to research and ratings firm Quacquarelli Symonds’ top 50 English-teaching schools worldwide.
All this needs deeper reflection, however, owing to the latest viral video of a young Filipina berating a security guard using her colegiala English. However, let us go beyond the personalities involved, especially since there was already an apology issued regarding the incident. Truth be told, we should admit that her recourse to win an argument is not at all surprising. Many of us, in fact, use it quite well. Perhaps, the only difference is we do not sound like soap opera antagonists and that we were never caught on camera. But as the incident may characterize many of us, we could gather insights about ourselves as English-speaking Filipinos.
Some pertinent questions arise from the incident: what does it mean when Juana dela Cruz uses a foreign language to belittle her fellow Filipina? Why do we use English to intimidate our countrymen who cannot speak it fluently? How did we come to this point where we use English as a tool for division in our nation?
I believe it all starts in our schools. For one, our curriculum and subjects are severely disjointed. We may be teaching English well, but there is a lack of integration with other subjects. Take Values Education. Wouldn’t it be worthwhile if English classes could also discuss the ethical considerations of being fluent in a foreign language because of the privilege of being enrolled in a renowned private school? The class could discuss how people abuse this entitlement to make it to the top echelon of companies simply because other employees could not afford steep tuition fees.
More importantly, we detach the teaching of English from our country’s history. My college teacher Ambeth Ocampo quoted a historical document from 1918 that contains then US Secretary of Education Charles Yeater proudly reporting how English has been taught successfully in the Philippines. Through Ocampo’s research, we find that Yeater wrote, “The English language will not only be the common medium of exchange among people but will be the language which will practically be exclusively used in the government and legislative service ... The native dialects will continue to be used for home purposes for many years, possibly for one or two generations. They cannot afford a medium of intellectual exchange because of the poverty of their vocabularies and because those speaking the various dialects are unable to understand each other.”
Considering this historical context of how English was taught to replace and displace our own “dialects,” it is evident then how English can have the capacity to divide the nation between the westernized haves and the aboriginal have-nots. By detaching our teaching of English from History, we have taught our students to wield a double-edged sword highlighting only its advantages but cowering away from discussing the wounds it has wrought and inflicted on our sense of nationalism as Filipinos.
Fluency in English will continue to be a most useful skill set of every educated Filipino. It is already part of our culture and global identity as a bilingual nation. For this, we should be proud. But languages, because of their capacity for communication, must only be used to unite people and never to divide us by distinguishing the educated from the underprivileged.
If teachers continue to be negligent in encouraging students to rethink and reflect on how they should use the skills learned in school, then we would continue to perpetuate the practice of some people who use their education to advance self at the expense of the disadvantaged other. Christian writer CS Lewis counseled, “Education without values makes us clever devils.” Are Filipino teachers content with producing English-speaking ones?
source: philstar.com
All this needs deeper reflection, however, owing to the latest viral video of a young Filipina berating a security guard using her colegiala English. However, let us go beyond the personalities involved, especially since there was already an apology issued regarding the incident. Truth be told, we should admit that her recourse to win an argument is not at all surprising. Many of us, in fact, use it quite well. Perhaps, the only difference is we do not sound like soap opera antagonists and that we were never caught on camera. But as the incident may characterize many of us, we could gather insights about ourselves as English-speaking Filipinos.
Some pertinent questions arise from the incident: what does it mean when Juana dela Cruz uses a foreign language to belittle her fellow Filipina? Why do we use English to intimidate our countrymen who cannot speak it fluently? How did we come to this point where we use English as a tool for division in our nation?
I believe it all starts in our schools. For one, our curriculum and subjects are severely disjointed. We may be teaching English well, but there is a lack of integration with other subjects. Take Values Education. Wouldn’t it be worthwhile if English classes could also discuss the ethical considerations of being fluent in a foreign language because of the privilege of being enrolled in a renowned private school? The class could discuss how people abuse this entitlement to make it to the top echelon of companies simply because other employees could not afford steep tuition fees.
More importantly, we detach the teaching of English from our country’s history. My college teacher Ambeth Ocampo quoted a historical document from 1918 that contains then US Secretary of Education Charles Yeater proudly reporting how English has been taught successfully in the Philippines. Through Ocampo’s research, we find that Yeater wrote, “The English language will not only be the common medium of exchange among people but will be the language which will practically be exclusively used in the government and legislative service ... The native dialects will continue to be used for home purposes for many years, possibly for one or two generations. They cannot afford a medium of intellectual exchange because of the poverty of their vocabularies and because those speaking the various dialects are unable to understand each other.”
Considering this historical context of how English was taught to replace and displace our own “dialects,” it is evident then how English can have the capacity to divide the nation between the westernized haves and the aboriginal have-nots. By detaching our teaching of English from History, we have taught our students to wield a double-edged sword highlighting only its advantages but cowering away from discussing the wounds it has wrought and inflicted on our sense of nationalism as Filipinos.
Fluency in English will continue to be a most useful skill set of every educated Filipino. It is already part of our culture and global identity as a bilingual nation. For this, we should be proud. But languages, because of their capacity for communication, must only be used to unite people and never to divide us by distinguishing the educated from the underprivileged.
If teachers continue to be negligent in encouraging students to rethink and reflect on how they should use the skills learned in school, then we would continue to perpetuate the practice of some people who use their education to advance self at the expense of the disadvantaged other. Christian writer CS Lewis counseled, “Education without values makes us clever devils.” Are Filipino teachers content with producing English-speaking ones?
source: philstar.com
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