• Follow us on Twitter
  • Join our Facebook Group
  • Join me on Google Plus
  • Add me on Linkedin
  • RSS
We empower you to manage and control your communications. close

TangataWhenua.com

  • Home
  • About
  • Communicate
  • Market 2 Maori
  • Updates
  • Contact

Updates

Latest TW.com project news & views

Google Maori Project launched (RadioNZ)

0 Comments/ in Projects / by GeekGirl3.141
July 30, 2008

If you can search in the language of Elma Fudd and Kling-on search engine, Google then why not Te Reo Māori? Husband and wife team, Potaua and Nikolasa Biasiny-Tule could just be New Zealand’s answer to Bill and Melinda Gates. Not only did they found website TangataWhenua.com they led the team that established Google Maori, which launched earlier this week.

Google extends to Te Reo Maori (TVOne)

0 Comments/ in Digital Maori, Projects / by GeekGirl3.141
July 30, 2008

Internet service provider Google is planning to extend Te Reo Maori into a new dimension through making it accessible online.

With the ressurgence of Te Reo Maori, technology is an excellent way in which the language can be developed even more.

“Tuhia te haa o te reo ki te rangi. Let the language permeate the heavens” is the catch phrase to raise the use of Maori language to new heights and with the launch of Google Maori this will be about as close as people can get to achieving that.

For Potaua Tule and wife Nikolasa this has been a long time coming. They set up their own website TangataWhenua.com as a one stop shop where they can keep in touch with each other.

Now it’s time to take the language a step further.

We are big users of Google and noticed Maori wasn’t there, Afrikans was there, Bork Bork Bork was there, Klingon was there, but where was the Maori,” says Potaua Tule.

The Information Technology industry says using modern technology can only be a winner.

“Google is increasingly the way that technology is taught in school. It’s the way things are taught for anyone teaching any kind of class,” says IT Commentator Scott Bartley.

“And for anyone teaching Maori in the class then what better way than Google in Maori as well,” he says.

Approximately 40 volunteers put their time and efforts together to get Google Maori off the ground and one year later Google America is pleased to have Maori on board.
 
Now this language which said to be thousands of years old has been given a new lease of life in the most modern way.

The language needs to be in the hands, the ears and mouths of young people keeping those old traditions live in a modern way,” says Tule.

Page 3 of 3123
Followon TwitterSubscribeto RSS Feed

Facebook Bling

Updates Snapshot

  • Digital Natives Academy – “Coding is the New Literacy”November 12, 2014 - 2:17 pm

    As pioneers of digital technology, TangataWhenua.com knows the value of the tech sector and the need for whānau to be not just users and consumers of technology but to provide them with the skills needed to become creators, developers and producers of technology. The Digital Natives Academy seeks to do just that; to guide and support tamariki, […]

  • Supporting Te Pou MatakanaNovember 12, 2014 - 2:07 pm

    TangataWhenua.com have been humbled to be able to work within the Whānau Ora space for the last two years so it was with great anticipation that we agreed to come on board with Te Pou Matakana to support the North Island’s first ever Whānau Ora Commissioning Agency with their communication needs. If you would like to learn […]

TangataWhenua.com Projects

  • Digital Natives AcademyNovember 12, 2014 - 11:49 am

    As pioneers of digital technology, TangataWhenua.com knows the value of the tech sector and the need for whānau to be not just users and consumers of technology but to provide them with the skills needed to become creators, developers and producers of technology. To make this happen, we are establishing DNA:Digital Natives Academy, a real life […]

  • Te Waiariki PureaNovember 12, 2014 - 11:22 am

    Te Waiariki Purea, one of Rotorua’s longest running youth outdoor and recreation centres vitally needed a web presence and wanted a site which would promote their many programmes and government contracts. Key to this build was ensuring information was easy to access and created a space where Te Waiarik success stories could be celebrated.

Followon TwitterSubscribeto RSS Feed
- TangataWhenua.com -