Thursday, 6 November 2014

Ahead of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, NTT Docomo to offer translation app for 10 languages

1106_00-1


Planning on heading to Japan for the 2020 Tokyo summer Olympics but worried about the language barrier? Fret not, as the country’s largest mobile carrier today announced that it will release a spoken translation app to ensure smooth communication with the locals.


NTT Docomo will offer its Jspeak app starting November 10, currently exclusive to the Google Play store – and not locked down to Docomo subscribers only. As long as you’ve got an Android-powered smartphone or tablet (running 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich or later), you’ll have access to the paid service, which will be available for US$.99 a day or US$2.99 per week.


“We invite foreign travelers to experience the ease and convenience of international communication with our unique smartphone-based translator to make staying in Japan even more enjoyable,” Hozumi Tamura, senior vice president of Docomo’s global service planning office, said in a statement. “We expect Jspeak to enhance cross-cultural communication as the world increasingly turns its eyes toward Japan, host of the 2020 Olympic and Paralympic games.”


Jspeak utilizes existing Docomo technology – Hanashite Hon’yaku – to convert spoken phrases in 10 different languages to Japanese. Developed in 2012, it won first place at the 2013 CITA E-Tech Awards in the mobile app category, but was a Docomo exclusive and geared toward Japanese going overseas rather than the reverse.


At launch, the app will support Chinese, English, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Thai. It comes with more than 700 pre-installed phrases for daily-life situations, such as using public transportation or ordering food at a restaurant. Users can also create lists of their most commonly-used or favorite expressions for quick access – though it’s unclear if the typical Japanese pickup line of “Can I get your Line ID?” is supported.


Even if potential users aren’t looking as far ahead as 2020, the app is sure to come in handy for the tourists – last year, thanks in large part to a steadily weakening yen, Japan set a record for inbound tourism with 10 million visiting from overseas.


Those who wish to forego a phrasebook can try rival (mostly free) options like Voice Translator, iTranslate, and Jibbigo. Travelers on a budget can also lean on Google Now’s speech translation function – or good old text in a Google Translate box.


We’ve reached out to Docomo for more information and will update this article when they reply.


See: WOVN.io isn’t a translation service, it’s a multilingual localization service packed into one line of code


This post Ahead of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, NTT Docomo to offer translation app for 10 languages appeared first on Tech in Asia.







Ahead of 2020 Tokyo Olympics, NTT Docomo to offer translation app for 10 languages

No comments:

Post a Comment