This tutorial contains a few translation guidelines useful for volunteers in TED's Open Translation Project.
To access the extended translation guide mentioned in the video, go to http://translations.ted.org/wiki/How_to_Tackle_a_Translation
This video was created for the volunteers working in the TED Open Translation Project. The TED Open Translation Project brings TEDTalks, TED-Ed lessons and TEDxTalks beyond the English-speaking world by offering subtitles, interactive transcripts and the ability for any talk to be translated by volunteers worldwide.
Learn more at http://www.ted.com/participate/translate
Thanks to the following volunteers for providing subtitles:
Arabic:
Khalid Marbou
Burmese:
Sann Tint & Myo Aung
Chinese, Simplified:
Samson Zhong & Hao Li
Chinese, Traditional:
Jessie Lin & Adrienne Lin
Croatian:
Ivan Stamenković & Senzos Osijek
Dutch:
Els De Keyser & Christel Foncke
English:
Krystian Aparta
French:
Elisabeth Buffard & Ariana Bleau Lugo
German:
Nadine Hennig & Katja Tongucer
Greek:
Theopi Panagiotoudi & Stefanos Reppas
Hebrew:
Shlomo Adam
Italian:
Patrizia C Romeo Tomasini & Elena Montrasio
Japanese:
Ai Tokimatsu & Akinori Oyama
Kazakh:
Askhat Yerkimbay & Bakytgul Salykhova
Korean:
Jeong-Lan Kinser & Stella Kang
Persian:
Farnaz Saghafi, Sina Pourasgari and Bidel Akbari
Polish:
Krystian Aparta
Portuguese:
Margarida Ferreira & Isabel Vaz Belchior
Portuguese, Brazilian:
Marcella Lopes & Mariana Yonamine
Russian:
Ksenia Dziubko & Bakytgul Salykhova
Serbian:
Ivana Korom & Mile Živković
Slovenian:
Matej Divjak & Nika Kotnik
Spanish:
Daniel Sainz & Emma Gon
Turkish:
Dogukan Ates & Guney Ornek
Vietnamese:
Sang To & Nhu Pham
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/the-language-of-lying-noah-zandan
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day. And although we’ve spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect these lies by tracking physiological changes in their tellers, these methods have proved unreliable. I
David Lang is a maker who taught himself to become an amateur oceanographer -- or, he taught a robot to be one for him. In a charming talk Lang, a TED Fellow, shows how he and a network of ocean lovers teamed up to build open-sourced, low-cost underwater explorers.nnTEDTalks is a daily video podcast
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/where-did-russia-come-from-alex-gendler
Russia is the biggest country in the world, spanning one-eighth of the earth’s landmass. But where did it all begin? Alex Gendler explores the epic history of the Kievan Rus, where characters ranging from Viking rai