Google's Word Lens is cancer possess a deep eroticisma smartphone app that lets you point your camera at text and get an instant translation on-screen. That's nifty enough as it is when you're navigating a foreign country, but it gets far more useful when you're dealing with an alphabet or characters you can't even read.
On Thursday, Google announced that Word Lens now supports Japanese, meaning you can go to Japan, point it at kanji characters — of which there are thousands — and see what the heck they mean right on your phone's display.
SEE ALSO: Google's PR team penned the mother of all repliesAs Google points out, you could already take a photo of Japanese text and get a translation with the Google Translate app, but Word Lens shows you the translation live as you move the phone around. Even better, it works when you don't have internet connectivity.
The reverse is also true: You can have English text translated to Japanese. See how that works in the video below.
The app is available for both iOS and Android.
Topics Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best Nespresso deal: The Nespresso Vertuo Pop+ is just $69.99 at Woot
13 political Halloween costumes that are crucially not Donald Trump
Facebook and Instagram told to overhaul nudity policies by Oversight Board
Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for January 18
Analyzing Graphics Card Pricing: May 2018
Want another great video game adaptation like 'The Last of Us'? Watch 'Arcane.'
The Dobre Brothers' bad meet and greet gets parodied by other YouTubers
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 12, 2025
Apple HomePod 2 unveiled with a faster chip and better sound quality
SXSW 2025: How 'Territory' is revolutionizing VR accessibility with aesthetic access
Boris Johnson will need some ice to recover from this woman's ruthless burn
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。