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Translating the World Without Google

Google Translate is pretty neat. It can translate images live for you; it can help do live translations; it gives product managers an undeserved level of confidence in asserting that you don't really need to pay for professional localization services.

It's great. It's powerful. It's free.

I don't use it.

I'm not a fan of closed-source, siloed public goods. It's a lockable door that Google can shut at any time it wants - whether because they decide to send it to the product graveyard in which Reader rests eternal or they decide they're better off monetizing it with a subscription fee.

Side note: the fact that it's free means that Google is likely profiting off your use of it. As it's often said: if you're not paying for the product, you are the product.

This isn't meant to frame the world as "Google Translate or nothing". There's a whole bevy of services that provide translations. However, between the market dominance that Android enjoys in the mobile market and how that's used as a springboard to bring people into Google Translate (not to mention its integration with things like Google Assistant and Gemini), it's likely the extent of what people know about what translation apps exist out there.

So, what do I use? It's a combination of free and could-be-free open-source software:

What's the benefit here?

Do as I Say; Do as I do

I recently had the opportunity to use it while visiting Brussels and Amsterdam. My Dutch is functional as long as the topic doesn't stray from common topics of conversation; my French is elementary, at best. Being able to drop text into TranslateYou (either via its image recognition or just typing it in manually) was immensely helpful in translating the multitude of French phrases I don't know and the not-inconsiderable Dutch words I don't know. It was a nice validation of my decision to use this stack to navigate my way through places where English wasn't always an available language.

Credits

Icon for this post was sourced from Wikipedia.

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