Google launches search translation service
SAN FRANCISCO: Google on Wednesday launched a test version of a translation tool that enables people to search the Internet in any of a dozen languages and have the results converted into their chosen tongue.
A beta version of Google's "cross-language information retrieval" feature is online at http://translate.google.com/translate_s.
The service "in effect, will make the Web universal", Google vice president of engineering Udi Manber said while describing it to the press at the Internet search giant's campus in Mountain View, California, last week.
"We have been working on translating all of the Web to all languages," Manber said. "The results are probably not perfect, but the information you want will be there."
Google's new software translates queries to perform multi-lingual searches of the Internet and then converts the results to a searcher's language.
The languages included in the service are French, Arabic, English, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and traditional and simplified Chinese.
The service is to eventually be expanded to include other languages.
"Here at Google, part of our mission is to make the world's information universally accessible to our users, regardless of differences such as language," the company said in a release.
"We are happy to announce the arrival of a new cross-language search feature that allows users across the world to find and view search results on foreign language web pages in their own native language."
- AFP/so
Other technology News
•Google launches search translation service
•Maldives opens first virtual embassy on Second Life
•British civil servants get iPods to help training
•Amazon to launch online music store with no copy restrictions
•Japanese scientists in eye of storm ... with goggles
•MySpace feature guards video copyrights
•Computer giant Dell finds place in history museum
•MySpace Japan launches video services
•Website to catalog 1.8 million known living creatures
•A time to Shine
•Yahoo offers web-based instant messaging
•Singapore's Digital Information growing faster than global average
•MySpace launched in China
•Wii have a problem with injuries: British experts
•Get instant answers from Wikipedia on your mobile phone
•Google launches search translation service
•Maldives opens first virtual embassy on Second Life
•British civil servants get iPods to help training
•Amazon to launch online music store with no copy restrictions
•Japanese scientists in eye of storm ... with goggles
•MySpace feature guards video copyrights
•Computer giant Dell finds place in history museum
•MySpace Japan launches video services
•Website to catalog 1.8 million known living creatures
•A time to Shine
•Yahoo offers web-based instant messaging
•Singapore's Digital Information growing faster than global average
•MySpace launched in China
•Wii have a problem with injuries: British experts
•Get instant answers from Wikipedia on your mobile phone
Tweet