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Since the technology and algorithms keep evolving (much like your corpora), it will become necessary to re-train your engines every now and then. Globalese keeps a record of when an engine was last trained, and if there have been considerable improvements in the meantime, it will let you know.

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The meaning of the green, yellow and red various indicators is as follows:

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If the Globalese version superseding the version the engine was trained on was released less than 6 months ago, the engine is considered supported.

Example: The latest released Globalese version is 4.3.3, and an engine was trained on version 4.2.1. If version 4.3.0 was released less than 6 months ago, the engine is considered currentsupported.

Deprecated Unsupported (redgrey)

Over time, changes that “favour” more recently trained engines will get introduced. This means that some of the “older” engines may start running into errors during translation, and being slower in general. Retraining these engines will result in significantly improved quality and speed.

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If the Globalese version superseding the version the engine was trained on was released more than 6 months but less than 9 months ago, the engine is considered supported unsupported.

Example: The latest released Globalese version is 4.3.3, and an engine was trained on version 4.1.4. If version 4.2.0 (which followed 4.1.x) was released more than 6 months ago, the engine is considered unsupported.

Deprecated (red)

Note

Deprecated engines must be fully retrained before they can be used for translation.

If the Globalese version superseding the version the engine was trained on was released more than 9 months ago, the engine is considered deprecated.

Example: The latest released Globalese version is 4.3.3, and an engine was trained on version 4.0.1. If version 4.1.0 (which followed 4.0.x) was released more than 9 months ago, the engine is considered deprecated.

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