@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ This approach appealed to us for several reasons:
* It encouraged active maintainers for each repo to ensure quality.
* Contributors already understand GitHub as a platform and are motivated to contribute directly to the React organization.
We started of with an initial trial period of three languages: Spanish, Japanese, and Simplified Chinese. This allowed us to work out any kinks in our process and make sure future translations are set up for success. I wanted to give the translation teams freedom to choose whatever tools they felt comfortable with. The only requirement is a [checklist](https://github.com/reactjs/reactjs.org-translation/blob/master/PROGRESS.template.md) that outlines the order of importance for translating pages.
We started off with an initial trial period of three languages: Spanish, Japanese, and Simplified Chinese. This allowed us to work out any kinks in our process and make sure future translations are set up for success. I wanted to give the translation teams freedom to choose whatever tools they felt comfortable with. The only requirement is a [checklist](https://github.com/reactjs/reactjs.org-translation/blob/master/PROGRESS.template.md) that outlines the order of importance for translating pages.
After the trial period, we were ready to accept more languages. I created [a script](https://github.com/reactjs/reactjs.org-translation/blob/master/scripts/create.js) to automate the creation of the new language repo, and a site, [Is React Translated Yet?](https://isreacttranslatedyet.com), to track progress on the different translations. We started *10* new translations on our first day alone!