Hack of the day: Translate signs and documents with your camera

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 Translate signs and documents with your camera

'The Times of India' brings you 'Hack of the Day'—a new weekday series of quick, practical solutions to everyday hassles. Each hack is designed to save you time, money or stress, using tools and features within your reach—from government websites to everyday apps. In simple terms, it's simple fixes for smarter living.Traveling abroad or navigating unfamiliar environments often means encountering signs, menus, or documents in languages you don’t understand. Instead of manually typing text into a translation app, you can now use your smartphone camera to instantly translate what’s in front of you.

Google Translate’s camera feature makes this process seamless, allowing you to point your camera at any visible text — whether it’s a restaurant menu, a medicine label, a public notice, or a form — and see the translation live on your screen. This tool is especially useful for travelers, students, or professionals dealing with multilingual documents, as it eliminates the hassle of typing and speeds up comprehension.

Beyond travel, it’s also handy for product packaging, bills, posters, and everyday items written in unfamiliar languages. With just a few taps, you can break down language barriers and make sense of the world around you, instantly.

What it solves

Helps you understand menus, medicine labels, forms, posters, notices, and signboards without typing anything manually.

What to do

Use the Google Translate camera feature whenever text is visible in a language you don’t read comfortably.

How to translate signs and documents using phone’s camera

  1. Open the Google Translate app.
  2. Pick the source and target languages.
  3. Tap the camera option.
  4. Point your camera at the text you want translated.
  5. Capture or view the translated text live on screen.

Note

This feature is far more useful than people realize — not just for travel, but also for product labels, bills, packaging, and public notices in unfamiliar languages. It’s a simple hack that can save time and reduce confusion in everyday life.

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