杏吧原创

Google’s new earbuds act as two-way translators in your ear

If you have a Google Pixel phone, you鈥檒l soon be able to speak 40 languages thanks to the new earbuds the firm announced last week
earbuds
Let me talk marketing-speak
Elijah Nouvelle/AFP/Getty

IF YOU have a Google Pixel phone, you will soon be able to speak 40 languages. All you need is a pair of the earbuds Google announced last week in San Francisco. These can be used to make phone calls and listen to music 鈥 but they also provide on-demand two-way translation.

To talk in one of the supported languages, you use the earbuds to access Google Assistant and the Google Translate app. Pressing on the earbud and saying 鈥渓et me speak German鈥, for example, initiates translation of your speech into German, playing the results on the phone鈥檚 speakers. Translated replies are heard via the earbuds.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like you鈥檝e got your own personal translator with you everywhere you go,鈥 wrote Pixel Buds product manager Adam Champy . It鈥檚 not quite your own 鈥 the actual translation happens in a Google data centre 鈥 but the voice speaking the translated words is processed on your phone.

The earbuds, which will ship next month for 拢159 in the UK, aren鈥檛 yet available for testing, a Google spokesperson told New 杏吧原创. That means it鈥檚 not yet clear how comfy the earbuds are or whether their 5-hour battery life is adequate.

Existing tech already does a similar job, including the Google Translate app and Skype Translator. So if the earbuds don鈥檛 improve on the experience, they might not stick around.

This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淕oogle鈥檚 in-ear translator buddy鈥

Topics: Google / Language