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Google Science Technology

Google Aims To Be Your Universal Translator 122

mpicpp sends word about Google's latest translate technology. "Google is beaming a bit closer to Star Trek's universal translator with the newest edition of its Translate app. Rolling out over the next few days for iOS and Android users, the latest version of Google Translate offers two key features — the ability to instantly converse with someone speaking in a different language and the capability to translate street signs and other images into your native language. Both features have been available in the Android app to some extent. For example, Google Translate for Android has long offered real-time translation of conversations. But Google's goal behind the latest version of the app is to enhance and simplify the features so they work more quickly and fluidly without any lag time. The latest version of Google Translate aims to change that. To converse with someone speaking in a different language, a user chooses his language and that of the other speaker. He then taps the microphone icon in the app, starts speaking in his native or selected language, and then taps the mic icon again. The app will recognize which of the two languages is being spoken, and then the two speakers can carry on their conversation without having to keep tapping the mic. In a test of the app's instant translation, The New York Times said it did prove to be a step forward; though, it's not science fiction just yet. The app fared best with short sentences that didn't include jargon, and it worked better when the users paused between each translation. Google also has beefed up the app's ability to translate street signs. Previously, you'd have to take a photo of the foreign text to get a translation of it. Now, you simply point your camera at the sign and the translated text appears overlaid on your screen — even if you're not connected to the Internet. This feature is made possible courtesy of Quest Visual's Word Lens app for iOS and Android, which Google acquired when it purchased the company last May. This feature supports English translated to and from French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. Google says it's working to add more languages."
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Google Aims To Be Your Universal Translator

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  • by P0ck3tR4wk3t ( 865643 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:27PM (#48813829)
    If only they could translate what my 18 month old is saying!
    • Simpsons did it!

    • I'd like a Canine to English translator too.

      I'm pretty sure at least one of my dogs is the equivalent of Anchorman's 'Brick' character.

      • I'd like a Canine to English translator too.

        I think you might be disappointed... I suspect Gary Larson was spot-on [whichdog101.com].

    • I think your expected to teach your kid to speak your language.

    • by OldSport ( 2677879 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @05:11PM (#48814601)

      How about a wife translator? Give me a program that accurately parses "I'm not mad" into "no sex for you for a month," "it's not important" into "this should be number 1 on your priority list," etc. etc.

    • by hawkfish ( 8978 )

      If only they could translate what my 18 month old is saying!

      When my younger son was about a year old, I asked his (2 year) older brother what he was saying. I figured that maybe being close in age he could remember or something. Older son looked at me like I was from Mars and said "I don't know!" and went back to his blocks.

  • Fag, for one.
    • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:32PM (#48813871)

      I'm sorry, I'm not putting that in my mouth.

      • I'm sorry, I'm not putting that in my mouth.

        Universal response to a fag in your mouth: Light the end on fire. The problem will take care of itself no mater what country you are in.

    • The Westboro Baptist folks were very excited when they heard that millions of fags are burned in the UK every day.*

      *With apologies to Gaiman & Pratchett, who made this joke years ago in Good Omens.

    • Tramp, for another.
    • Some other potentially embarrassing English-to-English translation problems I've encountered:

      "Hi, I'm Randy." Randy = popular male first name in American English, horny in British English.

      "Knock me up in the morning." Knock up = wake up in British English, get pregnant in American English,

      rubber = eraser in British English, condom in American English

      "Blow me" = expression of surprise in British English, insult where a male insinuates requesting a blowjob in American English.

      pissed = annoyed
      • first floor in British English = second floor to Americans, first floor in American English = ground floor to Brits.

        Does this difference also occur in elevator controls?

  • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:31PM (#48813863)

    This feature supports English translated to and from French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. Google says it's working to add more languages.

    It's not really ready until it supports Andorian, Cardassian, Ferengi, Romulan, Vulcan and New York City slang.

    • Japanese
    • Farsi
    • Klingon (please)
    • by Ol Biscuitbarrel ( 1859702 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:33PM (#48813875)

      Uzani, his army with fists closed.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      orokana otaku Nihongo wa suu

    • Japanese? Cue a spin-off app called "Real Time Engrish".

    • by Anonymous Coward

      • Japanese

      Japanese is a bit too complex and contextual for computers just yet. Even just parsing Japanese text with computers at high accuracy is a problem. Then there is information that can be omitted, inferred, or implied based on context in Japanese. If Slashdot supported unicode, I could give examples of Japanese text that can easily be understood by those that know elementary-level Japanese, but are parsed like complete ass by computers (even on the Google Translate site).

      This would compound with spoken Japanes

    • It seems Google Translate has a hard time translating to/from written Japanese. Google should probably work first on improving their basic translation algorithm.
    • They should first get the ones they have right. My native language is available in google translator, but it can't get even the simpler phrases right. Always a good chuckle, when someone had tried to translate a longer text. There was a wave of phishing messages recently, where you could tell the text was translated using google, and that was the one of the reasons why the attempt failed miserably.
  • A Brazilian like me will have to do a good effort to make sense from what you wrote if you do not know brazilian portuguese and try to use Google translate.
    • A Brazilian like me will have to do a good effort to make sense from what you wrote if you do not know brazilian portuguese and try to use Google translate.

      I spent two years in Brazil, and my wife is brasileira. I find that by speaking both English and Brazilian Portuguese I can understand most translation mix-ups between these languages. As an example, the confusion over do and make.

  • by theshowmecanuck ( 703852 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:45PM (#48813965) Journal
    We know Google really isn't into the whole "don't be evil" thing anymore as they have become a giant corporation like all others. And while I like the idea of something like this being freely available, the first thing that came to my mind was that now they will have access to people's actual conversations, not just search queries. I've thought for a long time that 'big brother' will not come from governments, but from corporations. Maybe it comes from watching the original 1975 Roller Ball movie and it's basis around the 'corporate state'.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      ...now they will have access to people's actual conversations, not just search queries...

      Not just search queries.

      You forgot that google has collected info about all the contents of your emails (to, cc, subject, and body), your entire contact list (names, phone numbers, addresses, notes), your calendar (birthdays, ages, appointments), all contents of anything you put on gdrive (images, files), and all phone calls and sms activity. There is sure to be more.

      They *are* evil.

    • by the gnat ( 153162 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @06:15PM (#48815097)

      I've thought for a long time that 'big brother' will not come from governments, but from corporations.

      A few of the many important differences:

      1) Consent. No one is forcing me to use Google products. (Well, except my employer, which contracts with Google for email and various other services, but anything that they have access to is my employer's property anyway and I have no expectation of privacy to begin with.) I could completely banish Google from my personal life without severely impacting anything I do. It's a little more difficult to escape the reach of governments.

      2) Competition. Microsoft and Yahoo would be happy to handle my email instead. I can't switch governments without physically moving to another country. (Voting doesn't count, and I don't vote anyway.) Conversely, it would not be a huge burden for me to jettison all Apple or Microsoft products, although it would be problematic for my music collection.

      3) Force. Google does not have the ability to dispatch a SWAT team to break down my door, shoot my dog, and haul me out in handcuffs. And why would they, anyway? They don't care what activities I'm engaging in offline except for the purpose of targeting advertisements.

      There are certainly all sorts of things that corporations can do to make our lives unpleasant, but it seems rather perverse to worry about creeping corporate dictatorship because of Google's ad targeting, especially given the track record of governments.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        1) Consent. No one is forcing me to use Google products. (Well, except my employer, which contracts with Google for email and various other services, but anything that they have access to is my employer's property anyway and I have no expectation of privacy to begin with.) I could completely banish Google from my personal life without severely impacting anything I do. It's a little more difficult to escape the reach of governments.

        I'd like to see you try.

        Because in the end, Google gets your information anyw

        • Because in the end, Google gets your information anyways because I'm certain a significant number of people you email use Gmail. And on analysis, that can easily be 50% or more emails now archived by Google about you.

          Which still doesn't negate points (2) and (3). What could they possibly do with partial email conversations? I don't put anything important and/or sensitive in email anyway - I mean, that's like the very first thing I learned about email ("don't send anything over email you aren't willing to

      • 2) Competition. Microsoft and Yahoo would be happy to handle my email instead.

        And you'd get no privacy with either, as well. So competition does not make a real difference to you, the user.

        • And you'd get no privacy with either, as well. So competition does not make a real difference to you

          I hate to parrot the free-market fundamentalists, but seriously: if the privacy you speak of was really that valuable, there would be a market for it, and I could find a competitor who wasn't mining my emails for information. (And there probably is, I'm just too busy to look right now, and frankly I'd rather have the free service.) Or, hell, I could just buy a domain and set up my own email server, or do ot

          • One problem with privacy is the lack of real information. I can read privacy policies. I can't be sure companies are following them. It's one of those cases where, at best, I can pay real money for something I can't be assured of getting.

            • One problem with privacy is the lack of real information. I can read privacy policies. I can't be sure companies are following them.

              Sure, but how can you be certain that the government is following the published laws? We've seen time and again that they'll simply ignore the law if it's inconvenient (my favorite example is China's state media whining about "constitutionalism", as if rule of law was some radical Western concept), and the US government has repeatedly used the justification of "we can't tell y

              • I don't think you're getting my point.

                I'm not at all happy with government surveillance, but there are differences in what companies do (until they're deprived of government contracts and their CEO thoroughly investigated, anyway). Companies will do different things with other companies. There's no reason that company A might not take my privacy much more seriously than company B, and if I'm willing to pay for privacy they could theoretically make money off me.

                Unfortunately, I have no way of enforcin

        • 2) Competition. Microsoft and Yahoo would be happy to handle my email instead.

          And you'd get no privacy with either, as well. So competition does not make a real difference to you, the user.

          Who exactly do you think you'd get privacy with?

    • I've thought for a long time that 'big brother' will not come from governments, but from corporations.

      What convinced you? The massive developments at the NSA?

      • One organization. How many businesses are doing the same thing, but because there is no oversight we don't see it. My guess is, as many as can get away with it. All the ad sense and analytics make what the NSA is doing look like a plastic kiddy pool compared to Lake Superior. Sure they're doing stuff we don't like. Businesses are doing it too. The one thing I will say on Google's side is we can see some of it.
  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:45PM (#48813977)

    Fine for ordering in a restaurant or asking directions. Not appropriate for business, medical or government communication, contracts, etc.

  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:45PM (#48813979) Journal

    It's less creepy than having this damned fish in my ear all the time.

  • by MRe_nl ( 306212 ) on Wednesday January 14, 2015 @03:46PM (#48813985)

    Now, it is such a bizarrely improbable coincidence that anything so mind-bogglingly useful could have evolved purely by chance that some have chosen to see it as the final proof of the NON-existence of God. The argument goes something like this:
    "I refuse to prove that I exist," says God, "for proof denies faith, and without faith I am nothing."

    "But," says Man, "the Babel fish is a dead giveaway, isn't it? It could not have evolved by chance. It proves that You exist, and so therefore, by Your own arguments, You don't. QED".

    "Oh dear," says God, "I hadn't thought of that." and promptly vanishes in a puff of logic.

  • Looking forward to the day when I can watch old European softcore movies on Youtube and actually understand what's going on. (Besides the obvious.)

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I thought that this was already available on Windows Phone?

    • Supports only 15 languages - Arabic, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Norweigian, Farsi, Polish, Portugese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish and Vietnamese.
  • Google only has /relatively/ good voice recognition for english, it absolutely sucks in other languages. It just doesn't work, simple as that.
    • My hovercraft is full of eels.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Absolutely sucks in two seconds time might be better than you spending two years learning the language to be better, though.

      (As an expat, who moved without knowledge of the local language, I'd say that Google Translate is surpassed after about the one year mark.)

  • "But Google's goal behind the latest version of the app is to enhance and simplify the features so they work more quickly and fluidly without any lag time. The latest version of Google Translate aims to change that."

    So... slower and laggier in the new version then?

    Maybe the story author needs Google Translate.

  • It can't become a translator any time soon. It's not even an adequate dictionary yet.

  • Unless and until Google starts to hire actual translators and pay them actual money, this is value subtracting and will suck income out of the very translators it depends on. If we are really unlucky, it will be an unsustainable parasitism, driving translators out of work and actually reducing the ability of the world to deal with multiple languages.

    • Unless and until Google starts to hire actual translators and pay them actual money, this is value subtracting and will suck income out of the very translators it depends on. If we are really unlucky, it will be an unsustainable parasitism, driving translators out of work and actually reducing the ability of the world to deal with multiple languages.

      I tend to think that Google Translate provides professional translators with a neverending supply of work, while they try to extract their client from whatever mess Google Translate got them into.

      Seriously... GT does the sort of work that nobody ever hired a professional translator for. This frees them up to do the real work. And if a professional translator can't do better than GT, then that's a job that's becoming more specialized... kind of like the farrier and the haberdasher.

  • Google's current effort is nothing like the Star Trek Universal Translator, and it is exceedingly unlikely that anything ever will be. The STUT is supposed to be able to translate languages that it has not been programmed to translate and has never been exposed to before. Existing translators, including Google's, can only work with languages that they already know.
  • "For Google is a bit close beaming of iOS and Android users to the latest version and Star Trek universal translator of the translation application, translate rolling, the latest version of Google is two to offer an important function over the next few days - . Conversely both features to instantly fart the ability to some extent in another language and the native language that is used in Android apps and someone who speaks to the ability to convert the road signs and other images. for example, for Google's

  • Interpreters get paid $100 and up to do the job now. A few million people could use a translator for that. Difficulty: it's a visual language.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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