Hi Jelle, *, On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 5:47 PM, Jelle Mulder <pjmul...@xs4all.nl> wrote: > [...] > Well the point I'm trying to make is that the installer is completely > localised.
Yes, I fully understand. But while I see it is a problem for /you/, I doubt that this szenario is affecting "the masses". Even when the language of the OS is not the target language of your application, one can assume that the person using the OS at least understands the OS language. Everything else is a corner case. But then again: I see that having a dropdown or other selection within the installer to switch both the installer language as the default of what gets installed to the respective language only as a nice feature. And to repeat myself: ###### "I have no insight on hard it would be to add a button "use english" for the installer - but in any case: File an issue in buzilla, just discussing it here won't change anything. ###### > [...] > and probably the odd 10% of all world population that can consider > themselves immigrants. I disagree here. Why do they use a OS they cannot understand in the first place? Either they already own a computer, then they should just keep using that, or they have to buy one, but then they could just buy a version in the language they understand. And if you're there to work - how are you supposed to actually do work, when you cannot understand the OS - and why let people install you software there? So to me it still is a rare corner-case. > Oh,.. sure,.. I could plug some Linux distro on it and all my trouble would > be over. However, that would exclude me from communicatng with my collegues > that run all those nifty malware tools like QQ (some IM) and the like. Nor > do Linux distro's support Chinese all that well for those that cannot read > Chinese. It exists, but alas,.. the info is all in Chinese and not all of it > is in HTML format that I might run through Google Chrome to translate it. I can't follow you on the Linux point here. If you don't understand any chinese, why install chinese linux? If you cannot read chinese, how would you write chinese? (I can only assume you mean how to install a IME to write chinese is not documented in "non-chinese" properly - but then again - chicken and egg problem - just install ibus with a chinese IME and you're done - the times where installing an IME was painfull are long over, thanks to all Linux-distros using UTF-8 by default now. > [-..] > Come on people,.. if this is the UI/UX department, this issue is right at > it's place as this is UI/UX at it's purest. Sorry, but you wrote to the l10n list - at least that is what I have been replying to.. File a bug an indeed UX would be the correct place to lay out what it should offer. ciao Christian -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to l10n+h...@global.libreoffice.org Problems? http://www.libreoffice.org/get-help/mailing-lists/how-to-unsubscribe/ Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.libreoffice.org/global/l10n/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted