Pagine: [1 2] > | What's are Good Lightweight Translation Softwares? Iniziatore argomento: Paul999
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I'm looking for translation software that's usefriendly and that above all is leightweight, a.k.a.. it loads fast.
I'm working on a somewhat low performance computer and I just trailed WordFast and MemoQ....
These take too long to load for my taste. I want something that loads quick, even if it means less functionality.
I'm just looking for something that's a good step up from using a regular text editor to do translations. Not a gas eating lamborgini that eats ... See more I'm looking for translation software that's usefriendly and that above all is leightweight, a.k.a.. it loads fast.
I'm working on a somewhat low performance computer and I just trailed WordFast and MemoQ....
These take too long to load for my taste. I want something that loads quick, even if it means less functionality.
I'm just looking for something that's a good step up from using a regular text editor to do translations. Not a gas eating lamborgini that eats up all my PC recources.
The language I will be translating is English -> Dutch.
Any recommendations would be sweet as Google was not very helpful when I was trying to find something leightweight.
[Edited at 2014-06-02 11:32 GMT] ▲ Collapse | | | Michael Beijer Regno Unito Local time: 00:59 Membro Da Olandese a Inglese + ...
Hi Paul,
I just wrote an entire post and when I tried to post it, it disappeared. Hmm. Anyway, let me try again, but keep it short this time:
Might I recommend CafeTran. At only 3.5 MB it is one of the lightest CAt tools around. It runs on Java, so it runs on OS X, Windows and Linux. I’m biased (as I am active as a CT volunteer), but I really do think that it is THE best CAT tool available on the market today.
Have a look:
Official web... See more Hi Paul,
I just wrote an entire post and when I tried to post it, it disappeared. Hmm. Anyway, let me try again, but keep it short this time:
Might I recommend CafeTran. At only 3.5 MB it is one of the lightest CAt tools around. It runs on Java, so it runs on OS X, Windows and Linux. I’m biased (as I am active as a CT volunteer), but I really do think that it is THE best CAT tool available on the market today.
Have a look:
Official website (created by Igor, the developer): http://www.cafetran.republika.pl/
Volunteer-created website: http://cafetran.com/
Volunteer-created help site: http://cafetranhelp.com/
There are also quite a few of us over at the CafeTran mailing list (‘CafeTranslators’) with Dutch as one of our languages: https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!forum/cafetranslators
Michael ▲ Collapse | | | Orrin Cummins Giappone Local time: 09:59 Da Giapponese a Inglese + ...
Michael Beijer wrote:
Hi Paul,
I just wrote an entire post and when I tried to post it, it disappeared. Hmm. Anyway, let me try again, but keep it short this time:
Might I recommend CafeTran. At only 3.5 MB it is one of the lightest CAt tools around. It runs on Java, so it runs on OS X, Windows and Linux. I’m biased (as I am active as a CT volunteer), but I really do think that it is THE best CAT tool available on the market today.
Have a look:
Official website (created by Igor, the developer): http://www.cafetran.republika.pl/
Volunteer-created website: http://cafetran.com/
Volunteer-created help site: http://cafetranhelp.com/
There are also quite a few of us over at the CafeTran mailing list (‘CafeTranslators’) with Dutch as one of our languages: https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!forum/cafetranslators
Michael
This is why I always hit CTRL-A then CTRL-C before clicking Reply (or any other buttons that navigate you away from the page). So annoying when that happens. | | | Wordfast Classic | Jun 2, 2014 |
WF is a good option if you want really lightweight combined with the ability to keep on working in office applications while you translate.
Unfortunately most of my clients work with different software and "strongly recommend" that I use the same, but I always enjoy returning to WF when it is possible. | |
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Michael Beijer Regno Unito Local time: 00:59 Membro Da Olandese a Inglese + ... CafeTran can handle tons of different file formats | Jun 2, 2014 |
CafeTran can handle pretty much any file format, even packages and project files of other CAT tools, such as SDL and Transit packages, so there is no need to buy what the agency strongly suggests you buy. Oh yeah, and CT only costs €80.
Michael | | | (OT) For these cases... | Jun 2, 2014 |
Orrin Cummins wrote:
This is why I always hit CTRL-A then CTRL-C before clicking Reply (or any other buttons that navigate you away from the page). So annoying when that happens.
I would recommend Lazarus. It works for Firefox, Chrome and Safari. I would never again do without it.
http://getlazarus.com/ | | | Orrin Cummins Giappone Local time: 09:59 Da Giapponese a Inglese + ...
Christel Zipfel wrote:
Orrin Cummins wrote:
This is why I always hit CTRL-A then CTRL-C before clicking Reply (or any other buttons that navigate you away from the page). So annoying when that happens.
I would recommend Lazarus. It works for Firefox, Chrome and Safari. I would never again do without it.
http://getlazarus.com/
Just installed it - thanks for the tip. | | | esperantisto Local time: 03:59 Membro (2006) Da Inglese a Russo + ... SITE LOCALIZER
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Samuel Murray Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:59 Membro (2006) Da Inglese a Afrikaans + ...
Paul999 wrote:
These take too long to load for my taste. I want something that loads quick, even if it means less functionality.
I started the CAT tools on my computer three times in a row and wrote down how many seconds it takes them to fully start up:
WFC = 6, 5, 5
CafeTran = 9, 3, 2
WFP = 13, 11, 5
OmegaT = 11, 15, 10
TagEditor = 16, 11, 9
Trados 2011 = 25, 11, 60+
On your computer you may get different results. But when I saw your question, I immediately thought of WFC, because way back when I used a very slow computer I found that WFC was just as fast as anything else on a faster computer. I have no experience with CafeTran. | | | upgrade to SSD | Jun 2, 2014 |
Paul999 wrote:
I'm looking for translation software that's usefriendly and that above all is leightweight, a.k.a.. it loads fast.
If you want to load software fast, upgrade your hard drive to an SSD. Over here (Finland), I can get a 240 GB Kingston SSD for less than 100 euros:
![](http://content.screencast.com/users/dominique.pivard/folders/Miscellaneous/media/6056e063-7e6d-4304-87ab-372d7936e42a/2014-06-02_2341.png)
This would make a huge difference. If your computer is slow because it's from the XP era, forget about SSD's (they require Windows 7 or newer for optimal operation).
Regarding the recommendation to use CafeTran, keep in mind it's fast because it loads everything into RAM. If you work with large TM's and have an old clunky XP PC with 1 GB of RAM, you can probably forget about it. Michael probably has a turbo-charged beast of a computer with 32 GB of RAM... | | | Michael Beijer Regno Unito Local time: 00:59 Membro Da Olandese a Inglese + ... CafeTran is a lightweight champion on old hardware too. | Jun 2, 2014 |
Dominique Pivard wrote:
Paul999 wrote:
I'm looking for translation software that's usefriendly and that above all is leightweight, a.k.a.. it loads fast.
If you want to load software fast, upgrade your hard drive to an SSD. Over here (Finland), I can get a 240 GB Kingston SSD for less than 100 euros:
This would make a huge difference. If your computer is slow because it's from the XP era, forget about SSD's (they require Windows 7 or newer for optimal operation).
Regarding the recommendation to use CafeTran, keep in mind it's fast because it loads everything into RAM. If you work with large TM's and have an old clunky XP PC with 1 GB of RAM, you can probably forget about it. Michael probably has a turbo-charged beast of a computer with 32 GB of RAM...
Totally agree about the SSD. If you want speed, you really should get one. These days, I wouldn’t even consider building a PC anymore without an SSD.
Dominique is also right about my computer; I’m running CafeTran on a fairly powerful Windows PC (16GB RAM, SSD, i7). However, I also use CafeTran on a shitty old Toshiba laptop, which, although it also has an SSD, is running on an ancient super-budget Celeron CPU and only 4GB of RAM. CafeTran works very well on this computer too. Even faster than, say, SDL Studio or memoQ on my desktop.
Also keep in mind that startup times say very little about how responsive and fast a program will feel once it is actually open. Furthermore, Wordfast Classic and CafeTran represent two entirely different approaches to translation (CT = grid-based, whereas WFC is Word-based). Your favourite approach will therefore probably dictate whether you would want to try out WFC or CT first. Also, CT is a lot cheaper.
Michael | | | Laptop with 4 GB and SSD | Jun 2, 2014 |
Michael Beijer wrote:
However, I also use CafeTran on a shitty old Toshiba laptop, which, although it also has an SSD, is running on an ancient super-budget Celeron CPU and only 4GB of RAM. CafeTran works very well on this computer too. Even faster than, say, SDL Studio or memoQ on my desktop.
In my books, a laptop with 4 GB of RAM and an SSD doesn't qualify as "shitty".
Paul didn't give specifics about what makes his computer "somewhat low performance". | |
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Samuel Murray Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:59 Membro (2006) Da Inglese a Afrikaans + ... More about WFC versus CafeTran | Jun 3, 2014 |
Michael Beijer wrote:
Might I recommend CafeTran. At only 3.5 MB it is one of the lightest CAt tools around. It runs on Java...
Installer size is no indication of how fast a program will start up. CafeTran's installer is 3.5 MB but it requires Java, which is about 100 MB. So it's really more in the region of 103.5 MB. Even so, the size of the program is no indication of how slow or fast the program itself will start up (and as you said in another post, how fast it starts is no indication of how fast it runs during translation).
CafeTran supports only DOCX, not DOC, and not RTF either.
CafeTran's demo mode allows 30 segments and stops working after 30 days. WFC's demo mode allows an endless number of segments (a TM limit of 500 segments), and never stops working. This is probably why I never really invested any time in trying out CafeTran (beyond installing it) because very few of my jobs are less than 30 segments long. | | |
Samuel Murray wrote:
CafeTran supports only DOCX, not DOC, and not RTF either.
This is mostly a problem if you don't have a copy of MS-Word installed (that could be the case of most Linux users). Otherwise, it's just a question of saving your DOC/RTF as DOCX, an extra step, but not the end of the world.
Samuel Murray wrote:
CafeTran's demo mode allows 30 segments and stops working after 30 days.
I agree the overly restrictive demo mode of CafeTran unnecessarily hurts its adoption. | | | 2nl (X) Paesi Bassi Local time: 01:59 | Pagine: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » What's are Good Lightweight Translation Softwares? Pastey | Your smart companion app
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