GO GLOBAL

INTERNATIONAL
SOFTWARE
SOLUTIONS

 

There comes a time when every expanding business needs to prepare their software products for an international market. Internationalization Labs develops and implements custom software globalization solutions that ensure successful international product releases.

  • Prepare Software For Any Language or Region
  • Maximize Globalization Efficiencies
  • Reduce Localization Costs
  • Retain I18n Compliancy as Technology Evolves

Internationalization

Develop Internationally
Succeed Globally

Internationalization Labs provides internationalization (i18n) solutions for adapting software applications to global markets and international users. We empower organizations to internationalize their products and ensure they function properly for their targeted languages and regions.

We cater to customers who are new to software globalization or who are planning to release their applications internationally for the first time. Our team of i18n professionals specializes in educating companies on i18n best practices and standards. We work in a collaborative manner to ensure our clients are successful at producing world-ready software that is also localization-friendly.

By partnering with I18n Labs, your engineering and QA teams will learn what it takes to create and maintain products that meet your organization’s globalization requirements.

Contact us today and let us help you resolve your complex software internationalization challenges.

 

 

 

 

Internationalization

Defined

internationalization

The process and practices involved in designing or modifying a product to ensure it functions as expected when adapted for use in different languages or locales.

i18n

An abbreviation (or numeronym) of the word “internationalization” where “18” represents the number of letters between the first “i” and the last “n”.

localization (l10n)

The process of preparing a product for use in a specific locale. Localization includes translation of messages, menus, documents, icons, images, sounds, etc. Ideally, localization should require minimal engineering effort.