![]() ![]() I have already turned on the Conversation Translator, so I was able to translate his first IM. We get Kevin’s initial response that he is having a mailbox issue. Instead of using a translator within the office, he communicates his problems through Lync 2010 to Adam (that’s me!). Kevin is having a problem with his mailbox that’s located in Munich. The following is a pretend conversation with a person located in Germany. Below, shows some of the different languages that you can select. Note, it will not translate any IMs prior to opening the “Conversation Translator.” Another important step is setting your language and the recipient’s language. Now you have an extended IM window that will inject itself into the IM conversation. Select “Conversation Translator” to open the extended IM window. If you go over to the side menu, you will see a “Conversation Translator.” Think of the extension as “injecting” itself into the conversation, saving you the necessary steps of copying and pasting from a translation website. The basic premise of the extension is to automatically translate incoming IMs and preview and send outgoing translations to the recipient. Now, you go ahead and start the Lync 2010 client and you’re ready to use the extension. reg file to import the keys into the registry. If you currently have the Lync 2010 client open, close it. Save the Text file and change the extension to. “ExtensibilityApplicationType”=dword:00000000 Thankfully, you don’t need to grab the Lync SDK and compile the Conversation Translator as the heavy lifting has already been done.Ĭreate the registry key by opening a new Text file and copying the following:
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