Google Translate now offers Gemini-assisted translations

Google has started rolling out a new version of its Translate app with a feature that allows you to create more accurate Gemini AI-assisted translations, 9to5Google reported. The feature appears as an AI model picker at the top of the app, allowing you to choose between “Fast” and “Advanced” translations. It’s appeared for some users on iOS but not Android to date, and the Advanced mode only translates between English and French, and English and Spanish.

To use the new model, simply click on the picker up top. That gives you a choice between “Fast” that “Optimizes for speed and efficiency,” and “Advanced,” that “specializes in accuracy using Gemini,” according to the dialog box. 

Google Translate now offers Gemini-assisted translations
Engadget

To test this, I ran a passage from Moliere’s French language play, Le Misanthrope: “Franchement, il est bon à mettre au cabinet; Vous vous êtes réglé sur de méchants modèles, Et vos expressions ne sont point naturelles.” The result from “Fast” mode was nearly a word-for-word translation: “Frankly, he’s fit for the closet; you’ve based yourself on bad models, and your expressions are not natural.” That is not only inaccurate (it should be “Frankly, it’s fit for the toilet”) but also unclear.

Advanced mode, meanwhile, gave me an accurate take that better invoked the book’s style: “Frankly, it’s fit to be thrown in the toilet; You have based yourself on wretched models, And your expressions are not at all natural.” The standalone Gemini app in Pro mode delivered nearly the same result, while adding context about the passage and how it fits in with the rest of the play. 

At the cost of some speed, Google Translate’s new Advanced model appears to offer more accurate and contextual translations. If you really need to be sure that a translation is correct, however, it might be best to check Gemini directly, as it can also offer extra context. As always, though, remember that any AI can hallucinate and produce errors. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/google-translate-now-offers-gemini-assisted-translations-151008774.html?src=rss

Read more @ Engadget

Latest posts

OpenAI beats Google, Meta, and Grok in all-AI poker tournament

OpenAI’s o3 model won a five-day poker tournament of nine AI chatbotsThe o3 model won by playing the most consistent gameMost top language models...

Think before you click: most free file-sharing apps expose your downloads to security risks, warns Surfshark

File-sharing apps may host files with malwareBox and WeTransfer offer virus scanning only with paid plansNews comes as the UK seeks to boost proactive...

Think phones are boring? Here are 4 reasons why 2025 was a big year for smartphones, and none of them are AI

Was 2025 a boring year for smartphones? Thin phones flopped, big time. The Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold elicited a collective yawn from my colleagues.Phones...

Star Wars’ original theatrical cut returns to theaters in 2027

Disney is bringing a “newly restored version” of the original, 1977 theatrical cut of Star Wars back to theaters on February 19th, 2027. It...

Chamberlain blocks smart home integrations with its garage door openers — again

The MyQ garage door controller is an accessory that can connect Chamberlain Group garage door openers to the MyQ app. The MyQ platform used...

Welcome to the big leagues, Netflix

Warner Bros. has an infamous history of being bought by other companies and then quickly ending up back on the market after its new...

Pixel owners: You can now use your phone as a Switch 2 webcam

The Switch 2's lack of a built-in camera means you need an external one for GameChat video calls. But now, if your phone is...

Meta’s latest acquisition suggests hardware plans beyond glasses and headsets

Meta has acquired Limitless, the maker of an AI-powered "Pendant," to work on building consumer hardware for the company, the startup announced via a...

The 1977 cut of Star Wars will return to theaters in 2027

Here's some good news for the "Han shot first" crowd. The original cut of Star Wars (1977), the film known today as A New...

“There is ‘no way'” – IBM CEO says current AI data center trends are unsustainable, and he would know

Populating a single one-gigawatt AI facility costs nearly $80 billionPlanned AI capacity across the industry could total 100GWHigh-end GPU hardware must be replaced every...