Posts Tagged ‘w0lf’s Translator’

Wolf’s Translator – Translator application for Pocket PC


w0lf's Translator

w0lf's Translator


Wolf’s Translator is a Windows Mobile freeware that uses the Google Translate engine to provide translations. Its can translate From/To so many languages at any time and it’s much easier to use on the mobile phone than the web-based version of Google Translate.

Currently, the following languages are supported by Google Translate: Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese, Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Croatian, Czezh, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Tagalog, Ukrainian, Vietnamese.

Please note that the translations are not always very accurate, but if you have a text in a different language you don’t know, it gives you a good idea about what it means in most of the cases.

A nice feature of Google Translate (also present in the application) is the Language Auto Detect feature: you have a text written in I don’t know what language, I tell it to translate to English, for example, and it not only translates it, but also shows the language of the source text (try this by checking the Autodetect FROM Language check box).

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w0lf’s Translator – Google Translate powered app


w0lf's Translator

w0lf's Translator


Every now and then we come across a great freeware application this time its w0lf’s Translator its a simple but extremely useful application. It uses Google translate to translate the input text. I find it useful to be able to translate From/To so many languages at any time and it’s much easier to use on the mobile phone than the web-based version of Google Translate. You also need an active Internet Connection. It also supports Language Auto Detect feature: you have a text written in I don’t know what language, I tell it to translate to English, for example, and it not only translates it, but also shows the language of the source text (try this by checking the Autodetect FROM Language check box).

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