Ahlan waSahlan fi 3alam Maren

Published 13 July 09 11:32 AM | mashour 

Maren converts Romanized Arabic, i.e Arabic text written through Roman characters, into Arabic script as you type. And hence you as a writer/author will be able to send your thoughts in Arabic-script-Arabic instead of Romanized-Arabic, and your recipients will be able to read your text in Arabic, making things more natural. Moreover, if the text you’re writing is expected to reside on the web, you have much bigger chances to appear on the search results than if it were posted in Romanized-Arabic, just by using Maren.

 

Among the many useful features of Maren, I will cite those I see most appealing. First of all is that it works as part of Windows operating system, and hence it operates seamlessly in most Windows applications and Websites. It generates ranked Arabic candidates as you type, and with a very high accuracy, which means that in most of the cases, the automatically selected “first” candidate will be the intended one, which means minimal interruption overhead on the user. The accuracy rate and response time are consistent across vocabulary (rare vs. frequent words) and across word length (short vs. long words). The conversion to Arabic is real-time as you type, regardless of the complexity of the input word and regardless of the available computational resources in terms of memory or processing power. Maren supports most common abbreviations, it recognizes abbreviations such as ISA, NVM, E7L…etc, and expands them into full Arabic phrases. You don’t need to be online to use Maren, it’s installed on your machine and you can use it anywhere, anytime, and most importantly, your data, conversations and written documents are in full privacy.

 

Let me give you some useful tips when using Maren:

  1.  If the language bar neither appears in the taskbar nor on the desktop, then it’s hidden and you need to show it. To do that, you need to go to the Control Panel > regional settings > keyboards and Languages > Language bar, and check the “show language bar” box. Once the Language bar is shown, to activate Maren keyboard, you need to select the Arabic(Saudi Arabia) Language, then select Arabic (Microsoft Maren) keyboard.
  2. On Windows Vista, you have a shortcut key (Ctrl+Shift+Space) to select Maren mode.
  3. In Rich-Edit-Controls, as in Word, Live Messenger and other chatting applications, and websites, you get best results when using Maren in the right-to-left direction, while in simple edit controls such as in Notepad or in IE Toolbars, you get best results when using it in the left-to-right direction.
  4. As a rule of thumb, select the orientation (left-to-right or right-to-left) that would better fit your needs, using Ctrl+Shift.
  5. Type in abbreviations, there is a big chance you get them expanded into the corresponding Arabic phrase, “BRB” , “JAK”, “ISA” ,“TYT” are few examples.

 

If you have suggestions for new features, want to propose new abbreviations, discover useful tips, or have questions, just let us know, we’ll be more than happy to answer you.

 

Enjoy...

 

Achraf Chalabi

Cairo Microsoft Innovation Center (CMIC)

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Comments

# Ahmed Elzeftawi said on July 14, 2009 9:40 PM:

This is too bad...Isn't this a copy of Yamli http://www.yamli.com/?

Why waste your effort and create something that is already available and copy someone else's work and claim it for yourself?

# AJ said on July 20, 2009 11:28 AM:

Will there be a version for MAC?

that would be really great

# mashour said on July 20, 2009 12:41 PM:

Thanks for your comments.

As for the "copying from others" comment, I would like to correct this impression with the following facts:

1- Microsoft was the first to use transliteration to develop an Input Method Editor (the Chinese IME) back in the nineties, and it has been part of Windows OS since Windows XP.

2- The wide and fast-growing adoption of Maren inside and outside the region has proven the efforts spent were really worthwhile.

As for the MAC question, Maren works on Windows XP, Vista and 7 on any hardware including MAC. Supporting MAC OS is not in our plans for the moment.

# Yasmine said on September 9, 2009 2:37 PM:

So should I expect Maren to work on my mac if using 'work for mac'? As i've already tried that but it doesn't work! Come on give us a plan for mac users!! Please :)

# Yasmine said on September 9, 2009 2:38 PM:

Woops meant ' Microsoft WORD for Mac'

# Ahmed said on October 26, 2009 8:32 AM:

Where can i find the full list of Maren abbreviations?

# jk_pelaez said on December 13, 2009 1:26 AM:

call me 661-332 6343

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