![]() ![]() This setup uses the windows camera interface to pull HDMI video (using Escapi by Jari Komppa) to create screenshots that it sends to Google. (of course the non-modified version is sent to Google) I modify the captured image slightly so the luma is high enough to not be transparent in the overlay. I’m doing luma keying instead of chroma as I can’t really avoid green here. Happy with how merging two video signals worked with a Roland V-02HD on the PlayStep project, I used a similar method here too. (Not required, desktop mode doesn’t need any of this, but I’ll talk about that later) Here are how my physical cables/boxes are setup for “camera mode”. If translated as dialog, it would look and read very badly. For example, options on a menu shouldn’t be translated all together ( Run Attack Use Item), but little pieces separately like “Run”, “Attack”, “Use item” and overlaid exactly over the original positions. If a section isn’t determined to be dialog, “Line by line” is used. The green text means it is being treated as “dialog” using its weighting system to decide what is/isn’t dialog. In the video above, you’ll notice some translated text is white and some is green. Can drag a rectangle to only translate a small area (Ctrl-F10 by default).Can read the dialog out loud in either the original or translated language.Different fonts are automatically used for different languages (configuration in font.txt) Can translate any language to any language without needing any local data as Google is doing all the work, can handle rendering Japanese, Chinese, Korean, etc.Allows copy/pasting the translated or original language or looking up a kanji by clicking on it.Overlays the frozen frame and translations over the gameplay. ![]() Studies the layout and decides which text is dialog and which bits should be translated “line by line”.Snaps a picture from the screen or HDMI signal, sends it to google to be analyzed for text in any language.UGT 0.62 released – now includes a hotkey for drag-rect selection and support for rendering Hindi /6DdZfBAS87- Seth A. So I wrote something to do the job called UGT ( Universal Game Translator) – you can download it near the bottom of this post if you want to try it. Font issues, weak OCR, and nothing built to work on an agnostic HDMI signal so I could do live translation while playing on real game consoles. I tried a couple utilities out there that might have worked for at least emulator content on the desktop, but they all had problems. Why isn’t there a Google Translate for the PC?! (don’t judge me!) I messed around with using Google Translate on my phone to help out, but that’s annoying and slow to try to use for games. Despite living here over fifteen years, my Japanese reading skills are not great. We recommend this add-on to all users.Example haul – I got everything in this picture for $25 US! Well, plus another $11 for shipping. It installs and uninstalls without issues. Still Google Translate is the best option we've found for fast, well-integrated Web translation. As with all automated translators, the translations aren't perfect, and we had better results translating from Spanish than from Japanese. Users can optionally set Google Translate to automatically translate Web pages not in their default language without prompting, which is handy to have if, for example, you're reading a foreign newspaper and want to view multiple articles and have them translated as soon as they load. We especially like that the translated text appears right on the Web page, leaving the page's formatting intact it's exactly like reading the original page, but in the language of your choice. Translating couldn't be easier users simply select the desired output language-there are 42 to choose from-and the page is translated within a few seconds. Users can click on this to access a sleek menu at the top of the browser window, but the application can optionally detect when you're visiting a Web page not in your default language and offer to translate automatically. The add-on integrates well with Chrome, appearing as a small icon to the right of the address bar. Although it handles some languages better than others, in general, it's a quick and easy way to get translations of fairly high quality. Google Translate is a handy add-on for Chrome that allows users to translate Web pages between a wide variety of languages.
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