Thats is very funny. I too am a web designer, and your mom subs at my school. She told me about you and i am planning on reading some of your books about fractals
Thanks! I was given a Harman receiver without the remote and was able to learn a cheap programmable remote the important buttons (volume, power) through an Arduino! Best regards, Gregor van Egdom (www.krekr.nl)
August 27, 2015 at 7:22 AM
Anonymous said...
Once I found a nativity set at Walmart that said "Insert Spanish Translation here" on every spot on the box where Spanish was expected.
(Yes, I know this post was made years ago, but I found your blog earlier today had have spent the last 4+ hours reading it).
Anonymous: that's funny, "Insert Spanish Translation here" left on the package. (And I'm glad that someone is reading my old posts...)
December 11, 2016 at 8:11 PM
I recently saw a Master cable lock[Image] for sale with the interesting text "Lore Ipsum!" and "Lorem Ipsue!" underneath the word "Pull". If you've done any graphic design or web mockups, you're probably familiar with the Lorem ipsum text that's traditionally used as a placeholder. This Latin-based text is used, for instance, when you want to show the style and layout of a website, but don't want people to get distracted by the words.
[Image]
Apparently when they designed the lock packaging, they put in placeholders but forgot to replace them with the French and Spanish translations ("Tirez!" and "¡Tira!"). I find "Lorem Ipsue!" in place of "Lorem Ipsum" interesting; maybe it is supposed to be a more Spanish-sounding placeholder, but I would have been more impressed by ¡Lorem Ipsum!
The moral is: make sure you check your internationalization; just because it looks foreign doesn't mean it's right.
"Lorem Ipsue: when internationalization goes bad"
4 Comments -
Thats is very funny.
I too am a web designer, and your mom subs at my school.
She told me about you and i am planning on reading some of your books about fractals
March 5, 2010 at 1:23 PM
Thanks! I was given a Harman receiver without the remote and was able to learn a cheap programmable remote the important buttons (volume, power) through an Arduino! Best regards, Gregor van Egdom (www.krekr.nl)
August 27, 2015 at 7:22 AM
Once I found a nativity set at Walmart that said "Insert Spanish Translation here" on every spot on the box where Spanish was expected.
(Yes, I know this post was made years ago, but I found your blog earlier today had have spent the last 4+ hours reading it).
December 11, 2016 at 4:41 PM
Anonymous: that's funny, "Insert Spanish Translation here" left on the package. (And I'm glad that someone is reading my old posts...)
December 11, 2016 at 8:11 PM