Posted by Franz Och, Research ScientistBecause we want to provide everyone with access to all the world's information, including information written in every language, one of the exciting projects at Google Research is machine translation. Most state-of-the-art commercial machine translation systems in use today have been developed using a rules-based approach and require a lot of work by linguists to define vocabularies and grammars.Several research systems, including ours, take a different approach: we feed the computer with billions of words...
Friday, 28 April 2006
Thursday, 27 April 2006
Our conference on automated testing
Posted on 09:45 by Unknown
Posted by Allen Hutchison, Engineering ManagerAutomated testing is one of my passions: it has hard problems to be solved, and they get harder every day. Over the past few years, I've had the opportunity to work on several automation projects, and now I'm getting a chance to combine my passion for automation with my love for the city of London.I'm happy to announce that Google will be hosting a Conference on Test Automation in our London office on September 7 and 8, 2006. Our goal is to create a collegial atmosphere where participants can discuss...
Sunday, 23 April 2006
See you at CHI
Posted on 08:01 by Unknown
Posted by Rick Boardman, User Experience ResearcherThe raison d’etre for our user experience research team is driven by Google's keen interest in focusing on the user. So we help many product teams provide the best possible experience to everyone around the world, primarily by inviting thousands of people to take part in usability tests in our labs, and by analyzing our logs to identify problems which need fixing. From this we get the data we help our engineers make Google products as easy as possible to use for the millions of people out there...
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