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    Home»News»Chrome, ChromeOS 106 getting Partial Translate language feature
    News

    Chrome, ChromeOS 106 getting Partial Translate language feature

    Kevin TofelBy Kevin TofelAugust 12, 2022Updated:August 12, 20223 Comments2 Mins Read
    ChromeOS 106 Partial Translate
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    Google pushed the first ChromeOS 106 Dev Channel update this week and it just arrived on my personal Chromebook. After a quick first pass of looking for new features, one turned up. Both the Chrome browser and ChromeOS 106 are getting a Partial Translate language feature.

    To use it, I had to enable an experimental flag, which I found at chrome://flags#desktop-partial-translate. The flag description does a good job of explaining the feature:

    Enables the Partial Translate feature on Desktop, which allows users to translate text selections on the page through the right-click context menu.

    Similar to Google Translate, this feature adds a “Translate to English” menu option after highlighting any website text. Note that the menu option uses English for my device, as that’s the primary language I use. I anticipate it will change based on the localization options of Chromebooks that use a different language.

    ChromeOS 106 Partial Translate

    Choosing the translate menu option opens a small popup showing the highlighted text. At the moment, the translation feature isn’t working on the few pages and languages I tested, however.

    ChromeOS 106 language translations

    There are also options to modify the source and target languages in case Google misidentifies either. Additionally, you can choose to have the entire page translated.

    Based on the flag details, this feature isn’t just coming to ChromeOS devices. It will be supported on the Chrome browser for Linux, MacOS, and Windows as well. Of course, that includes Lacros as well, which is the Linux browser that will be used on Chromebooks in the future.

    I tend to translate whole pages, even when I need to understand just a snippet of text in a foreign language. Still, I can see the utility in the Chrome and ChromeOS 106 Partial Translate feature to focus on a small amount of information.

    I’d anticipate this feature does make it into the ChromeOS 106 Stable Channel since much of the Google Translate code can be leveraged. If that’s the case, Chromebooks should see Partial Translate in roughly 6 to 8 weeks.

    Chrome OS Chrome OS 106 Chrome OS flags Chromebooks ChromeOS ChromeOS 106 Dev Channel Experimental Features
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    Kevin Tofel
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    After spending 15 years in IT at Fortune 100 companies, Kevin turned a hobby into a career and began covering mobile technology in 2003. He writes daily on the industry and has co-hosted the weekly MobileTechRoundup podcast since 2006. His writing has appeared in print (The New York Times, PC Magazine and PC World) and he has been featured on NBC News in Philadelphia.

    3 Comments

    1. CajunMoses on August 12, 2022 6:36 pm

      We can already right-click and activate Google Translate for the entire Web page to be translated into any language. I guess this enhancement just differs by sensing when you have text selected when you activate Google Translate and exhibits a quicker response. This isn’t by any means something that browser users the world over are clamoring for and complaining about. But OK, sure, whatever. Glad to see that an intern’s summer project got noticed. Maybe it could help to compete with Edge.

    2. Martin Lendvay on August 19, 2022 1:33 am

      We can use this functionality for a long time using this Google Translate extension https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/google-translate/aapbdbdomjkkjkaonfhkkikfgjllcleb

    3. ILoveTyping on July 22, 2023 8:20 pm

      I’m glad to see that Chrome is getting a Partial Translate language feature! This will be really helpful for people who are not native English speakers.

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