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One Step Toward a Babel Fish: Real-Time Voice Translation For Phones

the_newsbeagle writes "Douglas Adams's fictional Babel fish, which lived in the brain and could translate any language in the universe, was so incredibly useful that it simultaneously proved and disproved the existence of God. This real-time translation app for mobile phones, offered by the Japanese telecom company NTT DoCoMo, isn't going to freak out theologians any time soon. The company admits it has lots of work to do to improve translation accuracy, and it can currently only translate between Japanese and three languages: English, Korean, and Mandarin. But by allowing phone calls to pierce the language barrier, we just might have taken a step toward the universe that Adams envisioned: one where open communication between people of different cultures leads to an onslaught of terrible bloody warfare."

8 of 131 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds like a step backwards to me by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When machines start translating languages on the fly, people will stop learning other languages and that's a bad thing.

    Right now, English is the de-facto lingua franca of the world, because peoples need to talk to each other for business purposes. I reckon that need alone goes a long way to (mostly) maintain world peace, because when someone learns a foreign language, they're also exposed to a foreign culture. Machine translators don't expose those who use them to other cultures.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:Sounds like a step backwards to me by AchilleTalon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, the only problem is everyone has to learn English and its culture, but no one from English speaking countries really need to learn others languages and cultures. So, it's not exactly a good thing neither.

      --
      Achille Talon
      Hop!
    2. Re:Sounds like a step backwards to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I disagree. It was because I was able to access content in my native language that I was more interested in learning about the culture of other countries. The easier it is to communicate with foreign people, the easier it is to learn about their culture. I really dislike the narrow-minded view that a nation's culture is only accessible through its native language. (I live in Quebec)

      15 years ago, I saw Akira in English. Throughout the years, I saw more Japanese animations, I read manga, I read documentaries, I learned some of the words and some of the characters. I also read a little about the history. I watched documentaries, etc. All of these things, all in English, they made a foreign culture more accessible to me, they allowed me to understand Japan a little better even if I couldn't speak the language.

      If one day I can converse with someone that speaks a foreign language and share with him or her our culture without having language be a barrier, that would be very good. Isn't that exactly what Star Trek showed us? The universal translator broke down the barrier of language, so that different species could share their own culture more easily, more freely.

    3. Re:Sounds like a step backwards to me by Cryacin · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, they don't need to learn other languages. THEY JUST NEED TO SPEAK ENGLISH LOUDER!!!

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    4. Re:Sounds like a step backwards to me by citizenr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When machines start translating languages on the fly, people will stop learning other languages and that's a bad thing.

      I TOTALLY AGREE, just like written word made humans stop remembering things!

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    5. Re:Sounds like a step backwards to me by Mashiki · · Score: 4, Interesting

      When machines start translating languages on the fly, people will stop learning other languages and that's a bad thing.

      That's not really true. I can speak English, German, a good bit of Japanese( know about 40% of the syntax). But it'll probably take me another 3 years or so to learn it. My uncle who travels to Japan regularly for work can't grasp it, can't wrap his head around it. . He struggled with english. Though his job requires him to be able to travel all around the world fixing million dollar machinery, setting it up, tearing it down and doing repairs.

      Luckily in every place he's been, people have been exceptionally accommodating of this, especially in places where no one speaks english. Even if he could learn the language of wherever he was going, there's no way he'd be able to learn and grasp 90+ languages. And while english is the defacto business language(and it's taught pretty much everywhere) that doesn't stop cultural cross-communication issues either.

      Machine language translations are a good way to allow people to talk, for those that can't, or unable to grasp another language. And it does get harder as you get older, and not everyone is lucky enough to live in a multilingual country or city-state like Singapore.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  2. Brings back memories by wvmarle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The name brings back sweet memories to the first useful translation service on the web: babelfish.altavista.com, launched almost 15 years ago. The domain still works, but the fish has been gobbled up by Microsoft and it's redirecting to Microsoft's translation service.

    Of course Digital also got their name from Douglas Adams' masterpiece.

  3. Morons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Babelfish lived in your ear, not your brain.