![]() ![]() Place your phone down in a meeting where your presence may be needed, but you don’t really have much to say, and you’ll hear the conversation around you in your chosen language. It also serves a purpose when attempting to translate The Simpsons’ ‘Steamed Hams’ sketch from Spanish to English. Listening Mode connects to your phone via Bluetooth, and through the phone’s microphone, real-time translated speech is beamed to your earbuds. This is incorporated into three primary modes – listening mode, touch mode, and speaker mode. Five fish coins cost £9.99, 10 for £18.99, and 15 for £27.99, which is on top of the cost of the buds themselves.įor that money, M3 says it delivers tech powered by six language engines – DeepL, Google, Microsoft, iFlytek, AmiVoive and Hoya. ![]() There’s currently 13 languages on offer, costing five ‘fish coins’ each, Timekettle’s personal currency. Accessing languages offline requires you to download an Offline Package of that language. It caters to Egyptian and Moroccan Arabic speakers, as well as Spanish speaking nations such as Ecuador and Colombia.īut there’s a catch. ![]() In English, that ranges from Irish, to Nigerian, Ghanaian and Australian. These aren’t regional within one country – Cockney and Mancunian, for example – but rather to countries that commonly share a language. The M3 Translator Earbuds support up to 40 languages, including Vietnamese, Dutch, Catalan, Hindi, Hungarian and more. ![]()
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