FOSS

Linux Certification Course

The Faculty of Computing & Information Technology at Makerere University (CIT) is working together with the Linux Users Group of Uganda (LUG-U) to establish a Linux certification training program targeted at the private sector IT professionals, students, and academics.

Summary of project objectives: 

Train at least 60 IT professionals in RedHat Linux

Partners: 
Makerere University, Uganda
Center for Development of Enterprise, Belgium
Contact person: 
Karoline Beronius
Funding: 
SEK 100.000
Total cost: 
€ 54.000
Project Duration: 
January, 2008 - October, 2008

Language Processing Resources for Under-Resourced Languages - continuation

In the first part of this project (funded by SPIDER 2005-2006), a set of resources for processing Amharic (the working language of the Ethiopian government) was developed. The resources consist of text collections and tools for word-level analysis of Amharic. The primary goal of this continuation is to refine, extend and further develop the resources in order to make them useful to both the public and the research community.
Partners: 
Stockholm University / KTH
Contact person: 
Lars Asker
Funding: 
SEK 300.000
Project Duration: 
January, 2008 - December, 2009

Language Processing Resources for Under-Resourced Languages

People all over the world need to use their own language when using computers or accessing information on the Internet. Many languages lack access to basic computational linguistic resources that would make it possible to satisfy this need. Instead, this has proven to be a major bottleneck when it comes to promoting the use of computers and the Internet.
Summary of project objectives: 

There is a need for people all over the world to be able to use their own language when using computers or accessing information on the Internet. Still, today many languages lack access to basic computational linguistic resources (such as lexica, part-of-speech taggers, parsers, corpora or treebanks) that would make it possible to satisfy this need. Instead, this has proven to be a major bottleneck when it comes to promoting the use of computers and the Internet in the language. It is difficult to develop new linguistic resources without access to already existing ones. In this project we investigate how well existing linguistic knowledge can be transferred between languages with a minimum of human involvement and develop tools and techniques that can support such knowledge transfer. We to do this by working with the case of Amharic, the official working language of the Ethiopian government and spoken by approximately 20 million people.

The primary goal for the project is to develop techniques and methods that can be used to efficiently develop computational linguistic resources for new languages. This will also result in specific linguistic tools and corpora being developed for Amharic. A secondary goal is to establish a network of interested parties and institutions that can contribute to a standardised and unified approach to the development and a proper future utilisation of these resources in an open environment.

Partners: 
Stockholm University / KTH
SICS, Swedish Institute of Computer Science AB
Contact person: 
Lars Asker
Field of work: 
Natural Language Processing
Funding: 
SEK 800.000
Total cost: 
SEK 800.000
Project Duration: 
October, 2005 - December, 2006
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