From there, the Google Translate app looks up the letters in order to make an inference, or educated guess, about the words that the mobile device’s camera was pointed at. Google has trained its artificial neural network - a key technology for deep learning - on images showing letters as well as on fake images marred by imperfections, to simulate real-life scenes. Google Translate can do this by relying on an increasingly trendy type of artificial intelligence called deep learning. From there, the app can work even when the mobile device it’s running on has no Internet connection. People using the app can try out the support for the new languages by downloading a language pack for each language. The news comes six months after Google first introduced instant visual translation in Translate, and a little over a year after Google’s acquisition of Quest Digital.
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