Stephen Headrick
TL;DR Google Translate currently supports offline mode, but only for text and images.
Translate now appears to be working on expanding that support to Live Translate.
Access would be limited to a subset of languages with the proper offline downloads available.
Translation software is already very good — some might even say “great” — but we’re still not quite to the point where we have the sort of seamless, real-time, effortlessly accessible translations promised long ago by sci-fi creations like Star Trek’s universal translator or The Hitchhiker’s Guide’s Babel fish. Based on what Google Translate appears to be working on, though, we may get there sooner than you’d think.
For a lot of users, the dream outcome here is a translation system where they can just speak naturally in their native tongue, while hearing all foreign languages translated in real time to something they can understand. Google Translate has offered just such a Live Translate mode for a while now, and it’s only gotten better with the arrival of Gemini. But there’s still one big limitation there that holds it back: Live Translate doesn’t work offline. The good news is that Google seems to be doing something about that, and in Translate version 10.17.48.914427315.6-release for Android, we see evidence that points to just such an offline mode.
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While Google Translate lets you download language packs for offline operation, right now those only work on text or images. And if you try to use Live Translate without an active internet connection, the app’s going to complain about it:
AssembleDebug / Android Authority
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