And then many of us would probably decide to go and use it in english
no matter what. Example configs are in english, we end up being used to
shortcuts in english (wr, un all) and so on.
Also, localizations usually put a tax on delivery time.
I guess it makes no sense to support localizations as long as users
do not have to deal with IOS.
-Carlos
Keegan Holley @ 22/11/2010 19:18 -0300 dixit:
> This is actually interesting if you compare it to normal OS's. There are
> probably miles and miles of prompts, error messages, verification messages,
> commands and the like and the average user OS. In comparison, I'd be
> extremely surprised if everything concerning user input amounted to more
> than 5MB of data. This is probably the one time where IOS being text based
> actually comes in handy. In short it would probably pretty easy to
> translate IOS to the popular languages if the all mighty cisco decided to.
>
> On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 4:34 PM, Narbik Kocharians <narbikk_at_gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> I agree, but Mac, Windows or even Linux is different to IOS. But hey no
>> arguments.
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 12:22 PM, Dale Shaw <dale.shaw_at_gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Zack,
>>>
>>> On Mon, Nov 22, 2010 at 11:10 PM, Zack (Doc) <zack_at_tnan.net> wrote:
>>>> Then perhaps a better analogy is a programming language, since we are
>> in
>>>> fact programming the router to operate a certain way.
>>>>
>>>> There is no "German" C++, or "Japanese" Fortran. These are languages
>>>> themselves, which borrow words chiefly from English. IOS is the same
>> in
>>>> that respect. It is a language all of it's own, with it's own syntax
>> and
>>>> occasionally spelling, who borrow's heavily from the English language.
>>> Yeah, sure, so it probably doesn't make much sense to change the
>>> language used for command input but there is a lot of output in
>>> English that would be relatively easy to translate to other languages.
>>>
>>> Just trying to illustrate that what happens under the hood and what
>>> happens in the UI are two different things, just like in Windows,
>>> Linux, Mac OS and so on.
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> Dale
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>
>> --
>> *Narbik Kocharians
>> *CCSI#30832, CCIE# 12410 (R&S, SP, Security)
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>
>
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-- Carlos G Mendioroz <tron_at_huapi.ba.ar> LW7 EQI Argentina Blogs and organic groups at http://www.ccie.netReceived on Mon Nov 22 2010 - 20:05:10 ART
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