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iPhone, iPod Touch, Nintendo DSi, saving endangered Native American Tribal...
iPhone, iPod Touch, Nintendo DSi, saving endangered Native American Tribal Languages
There're fewer than 7,000 native speakers of Cherokee in the US & most are over age 60. New Media such as handheld game consoles, MP3 players & cellphones are used to revitalize indigenous languages.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Free-Press-Release.com) August 8, 2009 --
Cherokee-owned Thornton Media of Banning California, USA, has created software applications, free to tribal clients, that allows them for the first time to program their indigenous language onto Nintendo DSi handheld consoles. (View Demo video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I_RC3pvax4 ) The software, called “Language Pal” can program audio recordings in multiple dialects from multiple speakers. It allows the ability to program electronic flashcards, archived recordings, multiple-choice games, and tens of thousands of audio files with searchable database for use on the Nintendo DSi. Thornton Media’s Language Pal software is not an official Nintendo title, but a “homebrew” software created by an authorized Nintendo developer, which Thornton Media has begun the process of becoming.
“Our approach to language tools has always been to make language learning fun” said Don Thornton, CEO of Thornton Media. “Your kids will be playing with video games anyway, they might as well be learning their language.” Thornton noted that two keys to language revival are; to teach kids, but also to teach other members of the family to put the language back into the home. “Your community can have a million speakers but if the kids aren’t speaking it, then your language is in trouble. Kids today grew up in a world of handheld devices and video games. Often the technology competes with traditional culture. The technology is not going to go away so we need to use it to help retain our various languages and cultures. Our technologies are adaptable to any tribal language.”
Thornton Media has also been busy with iPhone / iPod Touch app development. Cherokee Basic, the first endangered indigenous tribal language app ever is now available for purchase in the Apple iTunes App Store!” says Don Thornton, president of Thornton Media. Cherokee Basic is available for download at only US$9.99. “Our indigenous languages are in trouble,” says Thornton, “We are leading the way in creating these cutting-edge technologies to revive languages. And we are entirely self-funded.”
The Cherokee Basic app (View demo video : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQ9ApASIyOQ ) consists of more than 480 professionally recorded audio files, including words, common phrases and 84 syllabary sounds. The app also has a “zoom-able” Cherokee syllabary chart. Thornton notes that Cherokee Oklahoma dialect is the only language that his company offers for sale. They don’t sell the languages of other tribes simply because their clients make all distribution decisions. “Three of the five speakers are my mom, my grandma and my aunt in Tahlequah, OK.” The other two are expert speakers from the Cherokee Nation and the Keetoowahs.”
In 1995, Thornton Media became the first company in the world to offer customized hi-tech tools to revitalize Native languages. Since then they have worked with more than 110 tribes and First Nation clients in the US and Canada. Their website at http://www.ndnlanguage.com
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