A lot of manga titles which are of interest to English-speaking readers are distributed by them as well. They all link to the article (Special:Whatlinkshere/Egmont Manga & Anime), but readers will only see a very basic discription now. Not even the entire article needs to be translated, but any addition of information would be welcome. Ninja neko12:12, 3 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: Noch is a german model raidroad manufacturer and many of its products are available in the UK and so should be listed in the english wiki and listed in the cat Model railroad manufacturers
Comment: There is currently an English article, begun by the requestor, which seems to be at least as good as the German one. I am assuming that the request is no longer needed, so I am setting it Completed. Scbarry (talk) 09:11, 25 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: The German article is very long, whereas the English did not exist; also there are pages for Degenhardt in Norwegian, Italian, and Polish along with the German.
This was an old request. The previous article was a smoothed-out Google translation. I did a full translation from the current German article. Scbarry (talk) 18:00, 17 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: it gives information about an important bodymind-work developer of the 20th century. This area of research and development is very diverse and could use some classification. Above all I find the article very well written and adhering to Wikipedia starters-biography standards at least.
Comment: Somebody mentioned this last August on the Misc Reference Desk (here) but as far as I can tell there is still no article on it in the English wikipedia. It might be better if the translator knew something about mining or engineering, but doesn't really matter.
Interest of the translation: Father-and-son team of musicians; the father was a composer, the son a critic. I can find scant information about either in English.
Interest of the translation: Started by User:Karada and User:80.168.225.52 on 12 September 2005, but not completed. So far, only about one half of the first section of the article is completed.
Translator(s): Karada,80.168.225.52
Translation progress:
100%
Permanent link original-language version: [URL date]
Interest of the translation: Encyclopedic article on a computer game with an innovative force feedback mechanism (literally induces pain if you lose) as covered by Wired. Has been a requested article at WP:CVG for quite some time now.
Interest of the translation: This guy is a big name in textual criticism, and started the classification and numbering system still in use today to organize NT manuscripts
Comment: After a few days of trying, I've given up my attempt to translate this - there are so many unverified statements in the German original that I can't provide an English translation without it being a complete re-write, and while there are some very thorough articles on the history of the Bukovina Germans to be found online, I don't feel I can write a summary without plagiarising those articles. Klingklang17:45, 18 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Somehow, the entire article was translated from German, so I proofread it. Yes, it still contains quite a few unsubstantiated statements. Scbarry (talk) 16:15, 14 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: German article is only slightly more informative than the English. Swedish is only one sentence. Translator incorporated material from German and Danish Wiki into English article. Scbarry (talk) 19:02, 10 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: I started a translation into English, but my German is not very good, and I did not have time to translate the entire article, Plus it is possible I made some mistakes
Interest of the translation: Hans Ziegler was a famous German scientist who emigrated to USA in 1945 with Wernher von Braun and made very important contributions to the early space race versus the USSR. In particular he pioneered the practice of using solar power on spacecraft. He is an important historic figure in American history as well as German history, and his biography is very worthy of translation
Comment: The text from the EN and DE Wikis was integrated (hopefully correctly!), so the proofreader should note that it is not a straightforward translation. Scbarry (talk) 23:16, 10 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: It lays out, I think, the guidelines for Operation Valkyrie, which was an important factor in the July 20 bomb plot against Hitler
Comment: The German game page seems like a good and comprehensive source to translate from
Both the German and the English articles have been edited too much for a proofreading to be practical. I'm setting this one to Completed. Scbarry (talk) 21:34, 10 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Because of the comment ("test") and because the English article is in much better condition than the German one, I am setting this request to Completed. I suspect this was simply a test case of the translation system when it was still fairly new. Scbarry (talk) 20:13, 9 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: All of the information in the German article appears to be in the current English article. The name given redirects to Reichert value. I am setting this request to Completed. Scbarry (talk) 14:20, 9 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The BDSM article seems to exist now and believe that this translation request is no longer needed, so I am setting it to Completed. Scbarry (talk) 00:57, 9 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: There have been attempts to translate the featured German Version of the article for quite a while, since its existence would solve a lot of structural difficulties in the development of a scientific and NPOV base for BDSM topics in general in the en-Wikipedia. The impuls to translate it came from User:Atomaton. A translation of latest version would perfectly fit into the en-context. A local copy under translation and can be found here talk:BDSM/de. Its not making any progress, since we are seriosly lacking manpower. Any help would be highly appriciated.--Nemissimo II14:15, 23 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: by Translator: Curious that the German Wiki should have a longer article on a US corporation than the English Wiki. The German version seems to me to be neutral.
Interest of the translation: The current English version is very one-sided negative (by nicely sourced, so it's not inaccurate). We need the other side of the company's history, which the German article might provide. The translated text should be an addition to the current text.
I could not find this article, either in the German Wiki or in the English Wiki. The template was created by Jmfayard, apparently from an earlier request in the previous system. I am setting it to Completed, due to lack of information. 17:00, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
Comment: Since the translation was made in April, 2007, a very large number of edits have been made to both the English and the German articles, making proofreading nearly impossible and of questionable value, so I'm setting this one complete. Scbarry (talk) 21:39, 7 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: I am writing the equivalent article in English and think this German version might have some valuable information (but I can't tell, because I can't speak German)
Comment: mentioned in Ethnic German, maybe only need a stub listing the various groups.
The German article has changed quite a bit since the translation, but I proofread according to the version which was current at the time the translation was made. Scbarry (talk) 14:01, 5 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Comment: No comments really. I just think it's really important article to get into English, and the German page looks really well done. --Lnbaker10404:33, 6 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Interest of the translation: This was a military scandal which happened in the province of Alsace-Lorraine during the period between 1871 and 1919 when it was owned by Germany. The affair's after-effects helped the German military gain political power over the civil government, making the German Empire more bellicose. This this scandal was a key prelude to the outbreak of the First World War.
Comment: This article exists as of now (4 Jan 2008) under "Buber-Rosenzweig-Medal" and has all of the information in the German article, so I am closing this request for translation. Scbarry
Comment:Interzonenpass appears to be a common English name for the pass, but both the German name and a simple translation (inter-zone passport? permit) may be used.