This always annoys me. I land on a site that’s in a language I don’t understand (say, Dutch), and I want to switch to something else. I open the language selector and… it’s all in Dutch too. So instead of Germany/Deutchland, Romania/România, Great Britain, etc, I get Duitsland and Roemenië and Groot-Brittannië…

How does that make any sense? If I don’t speak the language, how am I supposed to know what Roemenië even is? In some situations, it could be easier to figure it out, but in some, not so much. “German” in Polish is “Niemiecki”… :|

Wouldn’t it be way more user-friendly to show the names in their native language, like Deutsch, Română, English, Polski, etc?

Is there a reason this is still a thing, or is it just bad UX that nobody bothers to fix?

  • scoutfdt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    My Pixel started giving me distances in miles once because I had the system language to English. I needed to change it to English (German) to show me meters. I don’t know if they reverted that but at this point I am too afraid to change it.

    • psud@aussie.zone
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      1 hour ago

      My pixel set to Australian English works fine in metric. I presume you chose British English where they use miles rather than kilometres, of course that works for me as I also want Australian spellings

    • Noobnarski@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I have my Google Account set to English, but YouTube still autotranslates all video titles of newer videos to German for some reason…

    • floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      That’s just how locales work. When you set the language, you also get the associated date/time representation, unit system, etc

      • yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.de
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        22 hours ago

        But you should be able to set the locale separately from language. You can easily do that on any Unix/Linux system. In your locale.conf, set LANG to your language and all other LC_* variables to your preferred locale.

        Systems that do not allow this are badly designed. For a lot of multilingual people, locale and preferred language are independent.

        • LeninsOvaries@lemmy.cafe
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          20 hours ago

          Yeah, Japan as a country uses kilometers, and Rawhide Kobayashi has an easier time reading things on his phone in Japanese, but his heart craves the measurement units of his true home, Texas.

      • scoutfdt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        22 hours ago

        Yeah but it didn’t say locale or location, it said system language, that is what i was confused about language =/= location.

      • Hawke@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        And that is just an example of horrible UI. Locales should not be tied to those things. Maybe set the defaults but not forced.