Iran unveils a few innovations in Islamic tech
Even though Iran’s Twitter Revolution has faded from the attention of the Western media , the country’s talented techies keep innovating: The Press TV news website reported last week (October 25) the launch of the world’s first search engine for Quran-related websites. Created by Iran, the search engine allows web surfers to easily look up ...
Even though Iran's Twitter Revolution has faded from the attention of the Western media , the country's talented techies keep innovating:
Even though Iran’s Twitter Revolution has faded from the attention of the Western media , the country’s talented techies keep innovating:
The Press TV news website reported last week (October 25) the launch of the world’s first search engine for Quran-related websites. Created by Iran, the search engine allows web surfers to easily look up information on Islamic religious law. Ali Ismailpour, the director of the search engine (www.quransite.ir) said that it was designed to promote Islamic culture by providing convenient access to websites pertaining to the study of Quran. **The search engine currently provides access to over 360 different websites, he added. **
And it’s not like they haven’t been trying before:
In recent years Iran has launched several Islamic-oriented technological services. For example, an Islamic version of Windows XP was released in Esfahan in March 2007, which included unique Islamic features. Among other things, the program makes it possible to download the full text of the Quran with audio, and provides access to over 200 Islamic websites and a collection of dozens of Islamic prayers through its “favorites” tab. In June 2008, the beginning of the production of the first Islamic cellular telephone with integrated “unique Islamic features” was announced in Iran. Among other things, it allows to display the Quran in eight different fonts, the interpretation of the Quran in three languages (Persian, Arabic, and English), as well as Islamic and Shi’ite books on religious law and religious works by several prominent Shi’ite clerics. In addition, the device translates verses from the Quran to ten languages, displays the prayer direction worldwide, provides written transcripts or audio broadcasts of prayers at mosques, converts dates from the solar calendar to the lunar calendar, gives dates of religious events, and displays prayer times in 4500 cities in Iran and across the globe.
I do wonder, though, whether the Islamic version of Windows XP doesn’t crash as often as my secular edition.
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