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An attendee wears a pair of Google Pixel Buds wireless headphones during a product launch event in San Francisco. Photo: Bloomberg

New Google earbuds offer real-time translation of conversations - including Chinese

‘If it works like that in the real world, that is a wow-we-are-living-in-the-future moment’

Technology

Google on Wednesday introduced new Pixel ear buds that the company says are capable of real-time translation of conversations in different languages - including Chinese.

A demonstration given as Google unveiled a host of new products infused with its digital “Assistant” smarts got people playfully referring to Pixel Buds as an internet-Age version of alien “Babel Fish” depicted in famed science fiction work The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

In the literature, inserting a Babel Fish in an ear enabled a person to understand anything spoken in any language.

Pixel Buds, synched to freshly-introduced second-generation Pixel smartphones, promised real-time translations of conversations involving any of 40 languages. “Chinese” is listed among the supported languages, without specifying whether that is Mandarin, Cantonese or another dialect.
Juston Payne, product manager of hardware for Google Inc., speaks about the Google Pixel Buds wireless headphones during a product launch event in San Francisco. Photo: Bloomberg

A demonstration at the event included a two-way conversation with one person speaking English and the other Swedish.

“That was one of the best tech demos I’ve seen in a long time,” said Current Analysis consumer devices research director Avi Greengart.

“If it works like that in the real world, that is a ‘Wow, we are living in the future’ moment.”

VentureBeat reporter Dean Takahashi reacted to the demo by firing off a tweet saying “The Babel Fish is here.”

Pixel Buds were priced at US$159 and will be available in the US beginning in November. The translation feature will also be made available in an update to Pixel models released last year.

Ear buds can be controlled with touches, swipes, or spoken commands, allowing users to among other things select music, send texts and get directions, a demonstration showed.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Ear bud translators are out of this world
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