Featured Posts

Affiliate marketing - webhosts - up to 100$ per sale Affiliate Marketing is an Internet-based marketing practice in which a business rewards one or more affiliates for each visitor or customer brought about by the affiliate's...

Readmore

Earn REAL money on Twitter - with out hard work It is easy to make money on Twitter, if you have big account and many followers. There are many ways to do this and here is list of few of the good ways to do it, with out...

Readmore

Start making money on Twitter They pay up to 0.05 USD per click on ad posted to your Twitter account. You make real money on this, by allowing them to post occasional post to your Twitter account or by...

Readmore

Verified Accounts on Twitter Following the filing of a lawsuit by Tony La Russa over fake tweets made in his name, Twitter co-founder Biz Stone has taken to the company blog to respond to the suit and...

Readmore

Start earning with your website today One of the most important components to become successful in the field of affiliate marketing is choosing the right products Affiliate marketing products are your primary...

Readmore

Google is Working on Speech-to-Speech Translation for Android

Posted by admin | Posted in social networking | Posted on 08-02-2010

0

In Douglas Adams’s humorous sci-fi novel series Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy a special kind of fish is mentioned — the Babel Fish. When inserted into the ear, it translates any spoken language into whichever language the listener understands. It is a very nifty device, and now Google seeks to create something similar. According to Times Online, Google is developing a speech-to-speech automated translator for Android phones. It’s essentially a combination of two of Google’s existing technologies; its online universal translator service, Google Translate, and its voice recognition system.

Google plans to make its Babel Fish a lot like a human translator; the software would analyze chunks of speech, and translate them in their entirety rather than translating word for word. Franz Och, Google’s head of translation services, claims the technology could go live in a couple of years. “Clearly, for it to work smoothly, you need a combination of high-accuracy machine translation and high-accuracy voice recognition, and that’s what we’re working on. If you look at the progress in machine translation and corresponding advances in voice recognition, there has been huge progress recently,” he says.

Anyone who’s used Google Translate knows that translations aren’t (and probably never will be) perfect, but they’re very helpful when you can’t understand a word of some foreign language. However, Google’s voice recognition also has issues of its own, and I fear that these two combined would produce a very high amount of errors. The Times also mentions the issue of different accents, a problem that Google plans to solve by making the software gradually learn the speaking habits of the phone’s owner.

via http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Mashable/~3/JdgjJpZ7A8Y/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • De.lirio.us
  • Fark
  • Furl
  • TwitThis
  • YahooMyWeb

Related posts:

  1. Facebook Offers Translation Tool to Other Sites – Bits Blog
  2. A New Meme is Brewing: YouTube Caption Fail
  3. Student speech rights become murkier on social networking sites – Dallas Morning News
  4. Google and Verizon Share the Android Love
  5. Hobbyists Build Google Android-Powered Robot [VIDEO]

Post a comment