I love traveling in Brazil, but it's a country where few people speak fluent English, and if you don't have a Portuguese-speaking companion (and you venture outside tourist zones), it can be difficult to get around.
On my most recent trip to the South American country, the Google Translate app changed all that.
For the most part, I actually had a human translator with me, since I was conducting interviews with locals. When I was alone, I whipped out the app — and discovered, to my delight, a feature that Google added this past summer: the ability to get instant translations of written text.
All you have to do is open up the app, select the languages you're translating from (English) and to (Portuguese, in this case), point your phone's camera at the text, and watch the translation happen.
The feature was most useful in restaurants, where I had little clue what was on the menu and didn't feel like an awkward tourist taking out my phone and puzzling over the translations. As a vegetarian visiting a fellow meat-loving nation, I'm pretty sure that the app saved me from numerous accidental meat eating incidents.
The one big caveat: As in many countries, cellular connectivity in Brazilian cities isn't always strong. As a result, the instant translations didn't always work. When they did work, it was often just for a few seconds before disappearing.
So, in addition to making it difficult for me to get usable screenshots for the purposes of this article, I also didn't always get the gist of the translations. Here's how the service should work under ideal circumstances:
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