Meet Duolingo: Learn a Language, help The Web

Published: 14 April 2011 y., Thursday

„Duolingo“ is the latest project of Luis von Ahn, who is working for “Google”. It has been blowing up on Hacker News for the past day, though not too much is known about it.

Von Ahn notes that over the past year and a half, his Carnegie Mellon team has been quietly working on this new idea. It originally arose from a single question: how can you get 100 million people on the web translating everything into different languages for free?

One problem is that there aren’t that many people that are truly bilingual. Another problem is the whole “free” thing. So along with his PhD student Severin Hacker, von Ahn twisted the idea on its side. Instead of getting people to do something that felt like unpaid work, why not spin it as a learning experience? That’s exactly what Duolingo does.

The solution was to transform language translation into something that millions of people WANT to do, and that helps with the problem of lack of bilinguals: language education,” von Ahn writes. It is estimated that there are over 1 billion people learning a foreign language. So, the site that we’ve been working on, Duolingo, will be a 100% free language learning site in which people learn by helping to translate the Web. That is, they learn by doing,” he continues.

Von Ahn didn’t want to give too much else away as their still finalizing the service. He notes that it should be ready for a private beta in a few weeks. “We’re now mostly testing the site, and it really works — it teaches users a foreign language very well, and the combined translations that we get in return are as accurate as those from professional language translators,” he says.

He also says that while it’s currently just a project under Carnegie Mellon, he and Hacker may turn it into a company. And if they do, the countdown to Google buying them will officially be on. I give it 6 months until that happens. Tops.

Šaltinis: techcrunch.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Teens Stage Language Protest in Latvia

About 6,000 Russian teenagers and schoolchildren staged a noisy protest outside Latvia's parliament more »

Time limit planned for university studies

Working group proposes carrots and sticks to encourage early graduation more »

Belarusian State University Diplomas Acknowledged in the World

The Diplomas of the Belarusian State University (BSU) do not require additional attestation abroad more »

Knowledge Center celebrated beginning of academic year

International Center of Knowledge Economy and Knowledge Management organised the celebration of the beginning of the academic year. More than a hundred of guests gathered to celebrate the event. more »

Lithuanian schools in Poland to get funds

All Lithuanian schools in Poland that have been risking closure due to insufficient funding will receive the necessary funding more »

The Call for Greater Effort to Teach Estonian

Russian-speaking students told a meeting of the Federation of Estonian Student Unions (EUL) on 21 April that their poor command of the Estonian language is in great part due to the low level of teaching Estonian in schools more »

Microsoft asks colleges to teach hacking

Company working with universities to create courses that teach students to write secure code more »

Europe produces more tech students than U.S., Japan

The latest science and technology indicators for Europe show it's ahead of the United States and Japan in the number of students graduating in science and technology disciplines more »

Study: PDAs Good for Education

Handheld devices, once solely the province of CEOs needing a small electronic organizational device, are another step closer to being accepted as teaching aids in public schools more »

Free language courses lure non-citizens

Just three days after the launch of a 2,000-place, free-of-charge Latvian language training program on Sept. 19, almost all the places had been snapped up more »