Share this article

Latest news

With KB5043178 to Release Preview Channel, Microsoft advises Windows 11 users to plug in when the battery is low

Copilot in Outlook will generate personalized themes for you to customize the app

Microsoft will raise the price of its 365 Suite to include AI capabilities

Death Stranding Director’s Cut is now Xbox X|S at a huge discount

Outlook will let users create custom account icons so they can tell their accounts apart easier

Microsoft Edge introduces advanced translation capabilities and here’s why you should be excited about them

The capabilities can be accessed in Edge Canary, but they don’t work yet.

2 min. read

Published onMarch 6, 2024

published onMarch 6, 2024

Share this article

Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help Windows Report sustain the editorial teamRead more

It’s well known that Microsoft Edge is one of the best Internet browsers around, with many believing it is superior to Google Chrome, in terms of capabilities. Microsoft updates it regularly with exciting features, includingthese 3 experimental onesthat were introduced recently.

But the Redmond-based tech giant is not here to play around: the company introduced advanced translation capabilities that effectively allow users to audio or subtitles while watching videos on Microsoft Edge.

The new features were spotted by tech enthusiast@Leopeva64, and in a post made to X (formerly known as Twitter), they are quite easy to use. However, they are not functional.

It looks like it will be possible to choose between audio or subtitles (or both) in Edge’s video translation feature:https://t.co/H6w5y8fOZN.https://t.co/dW67RIo3Lkpic.twitter.com/m5Tz5k1SPf

The advanced translation capabilities were released in the experimental Canary channel of Microsoft Edge, and they will most likely be extensively tested before making them available to the stable channel.

However, as a drawback, these advanced translation capabilities will need to be accessed manually, by right-clicking on the video, accessing the Translate panel, selecting the video language and the language you want to translate the video in, and then finally hitting the Translate button.

Another drawback is the lack of an automatic language detector, as many users might not be able to identify the language of the video by themselves. For now, only a handful of languages are available, including English, French, Spanish, Russian, German, Hindi, and Italian.

We don’t know if Microsoft intends to do something about these aspects, but the Redmond-based tech giant might enhance the Translation capability with these features before releasing it.

If Microsoft adds an automatic language detector, the translation capabilities of Microsoft Edge could become some of the most exciting on the market. You’ll be able to watch videos in any language even if it doesn’t have any translation available.

We’re not talking only about YouTube videos, but virtually any video that you watch on Microsoft Edge.

More about the topics:microsoft,microsoft edge

Flavius Floare

Tech Journalist

Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.

He’s always curious and ready to take on everything new in the tech world, covering Microsoft’s products on a daily basis. The passion for gaming and hardware feeds his journalistic approach, making him a great researcher and news writer that’s always ready to bring you the bleeding edge!

User forum

0 messages

Sort by:LatestOldestMost Votes

Comment*

Name*

Email*

Commenting as.Not you?

Save information for future comments

Comment

Δ

Flavius Floare

Tech Journalist

Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.