LinguaLibre

Difference between revisions of "Workshops"

LinguaLibre's workshops gathers various kind of real-life and online events promoting the creation of audios via LinguaLibre rapid recording, by demoing it, mentoring hand-on usage of Special:RecordWizard Studio or via other ways. This page introduces and provides resources for each type of those workshops. Both conceptual and practical resources will be covered.

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{{#Subtitle:'''LinguaLibre's workshops''' are various kind of real-life and online [[LinguaLibre:Events{{!}}events]] promoting the use of LinguaLibre rapid recording, by demoing it or mentored hand-on usage of [[Special:RecordWizard]]. This page introduces and provides resources for each type of those workshops. Both conceptual and practical resources will be covered.}}
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{{#Subtitle:'''LinguaLibre's workshops''' gathers various kind of real-life and online events promoting the creation of audios via LinguaLibre rapid recording, by demoing it, mentoring hand-on usage of [[Special:RecordWizard]] Studio or via other ways. This page introduces and provides resources for each type of those workshops. Both conceptual and practical resources will be covered.}}
 
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Revision as of 01:43, 9 March 2021

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This page is a work in progress.

Generalities

User Interface and teaching principles.

On site workshop

Example: 2021 INALCO.

Online workshop

Example: 2021 Wiki Meet India.

Sporsorship

Example: Cantonese 2020.

A private citizen paying an audio-voice professional to records a list of words in his language is also a de facto option. Wikimedia cannot, by rule, pay for content. But given the high productivity of Lingualibre's studio (Special:RecordWizard), it becomes affordable, efficient and profitable for private citizen or institutions to lead such operation, hire an audio professional who will mass record. A first experiment was made with Cantonese. A modest 300€ lead to the creation of 5,000+ audios files within 3 weeks. These 5,000 words make up around 95% of daily Cantonese conversations. Cantonese can therefore be considered as largely covered, on the teaching side at least. For a more exhaustive coverage, 30,000 would be a better target.

This approach is especially needed and promising for rare languages, where volunteer contributors are and will stay hard to find. Sometimes, sponsoring contribution could boost a language. With such low amounts involved, a private or institutional donor can likely be found.

Funding

Example: Wikimédia France's Microfi.

See also