A few months ago Google purchased the developer of the impressive WordLens app,
which translates text and signs from another language into your own
simply by pointing your camera at it.
The text appears in your language
through the lens, as if you had super-powered Translate-O-Vision. As
with Waze and Google Maps, it looks like Google's own Translate app will
soon see the benefit of that acquisition. Check out the screenshots
below, taken from an upcoming version of Google Translate.
You can see WordLens' trademark feature at work in Google Translate
above, where it's live-translating an English menu into Spanish without
any kind of delay or recording. Here's the original image:
You can try out this functionality in the original WordLens app,
which was made free after the Google acquisition. The initial rollout
of Live Translate in Google Translate will work both ways between
English and French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.
Unfortunately, the version of the app we've seen can only go to and from
English - there's no way to translate from, say, Russian to Spanish
with this live mode.
But there's good news if you're traveling, or often
speak with people whose language you don't understand and vice versa.
The awesome conversation mode, which is basically as close as you can
get to a Star Trek-style universal translator, is going to be faster and
easier in a future update. The current version of Translate requires
the user to manually select each language in sequence, or let one person
speak after the other in a very artificial fashion, kind of like a
multi-lingual version of hot potato.
Note the center screenshot: "Speak now Hablar ahora," instructs both English and Spanish users to speak at once.
The updated app will actively listen for both languages
currently activated, automatically translating (in this example) the
Spanish-speaker's words into English and the English-speaker's words
into Spanish. This will let both parties speak more naturally, with no
waiting for each one to complete a long sentence or description if the
other sees a correction that needs to be made. As long as you select the
right to and from languages, both users should be able to speak and
read or listen to the translation more or less continually.
We don't know when the updated app with these features
will be available. (Don't ask us for an APK - if we could give it to
you, we would.) But the implementation seems complete, or nearly so, so
we can hope to see it in the next major Google Translate update.
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