Translation UX/Design feedback 5

The goal of this round was to test:
 * The prototype for a translation homepage
 * The current implementation of the translate editor

Test with User #66 on 14 Jan
Test with a Polish user speaking Polish, English, German, and Russian.

Translation Workflow

 * 00:10: The user is asked to find a project and follows the usual workflow: go to the homepage, select a project and click on "translate this project" from the project description page.
 * 00:56: The user is able to change the table filters to find "untranslated messages".
 * 01:15: The user notices the dynamic loading of translations
 * 01:24: The user selects "untranslated" filter but when loading dynamically, also translated messages have been added.
 * 02:45: The user tries to confirm an outdated translation by clicking on the save button which is shown as disabled. The user deletes and adds some characters at the end of the translation to overcome the limitation.
 * 03:15: The user comments that "it looks very good".
 * 03:40: When asked about the project selector, the user discovers that "what is surprising and I like is that you can select sub-projects directly from breadcrumbs".
 * 04:11: The user comments that it is nice that the editor moves to the next translation after saving.
 * 06:12: The user comments that suggestions were clear and it is a needed feature.
 * 06:46: When asked about the reason for skipping some The user understands the word but don't know which of the possible translations is better to use in the specific project.
 * 07.55: When asked, the user finds the "expand" interesting to get a bigger editing field but the user find suggestions positive and would prefer not hiding them.
 * 08:30: A suggestion was not completely correct (was in singular instead of plural). The user reads the translation but writes the text himself.
 * 09:52: The user opens the last part of the breadcrumb getting an empty selector, he was expecting to access sub-groups.
 * 11:33: The user is able to navigate and select translatable pages but all where translated into his native language.
 * 12:45: The use finds cool the possibility of using shortcuts but considers the proposed key combination too complex.
 * 12:20: The user notices that the filters are not working properly.
 * 20:25: The user makes use of the ULS to change the language. From the project page the global ULS is used for doing the change.

Homepage

 * 15:21: The user first impression was "Wow! This looks good! It looks like a modern UI. That's how modern websites mostly look".
 * 15:50: The user asks for a way to translate a project from the project list. The user does not notice the link probably due to being hidden by too many hovering events.
 * 16:45: The user comments that he would be using the "22 projects" tile as a way to search for projects. So he would the tiles to be clickable.
 * 17:27: It is clear how to become a translator.
 * 18:03: The user identifies the search bar function and comments that he would expect a list of matching strings.