May has passed with a lot of rain here in Budapest, and as the proverb goes, “Rains of May are worth gold”. With that in mind, we’re giving Easyling the Olympic Gold in new features. The platform is now able to process JavaScripts embedded into HTML, and some more of the rarely used features of CSS style sheets. Not just that, but we’re also giving users the opportunity to see how their scans terminate, and to upload customized segmentation rules (SRX files)! We’ve also reworked the website publishing interface completely, building on Google’s new initiative of allowing domain mapping without a Google Apps account.
And on a completely different note, we’re now en route to Localization World in Dublin. If any readers are also attending, hopefully, we’ll meet up!
There were a number of technical enhancements to Easyling this month, most important of which is the enhanced ability to parse non-standard HTML, now to a greater degree than ever, without the opening tag. This means that we now accept a wider variety of editor-generated pages, including ones that do not follow the HTML standard to the letter.
A second more technical enhancement is the ability to extract and translate JavaScript code. Last month, we rolled out a feature that allowed our users to translate variables in .js files. This time, we took it a step further, and our newly upgraded sniffer sniffs out JavaScript embedded into the source code of the site in