Google Translate made it easier to translate a text into multiple languages by adding tabs. When you select a language from one of the two lists, it’s added as a tab and you can quickly switch between the most recent three languages. Google’s language detection works pretty well, so I’m not sure why there are tabs for the source languages, but the tabs for the target languages are useful.
You’ve probably noticed that Google Translate’s custom drop-downs for selecting languages remember the most recent languages you’ve selected and highlight them.
In other Google Translate news, the Android app’s conversation mode now supports 14 languages. “Earlier this year, we launched an update to Google Translate for Android with an experimental feature called Conversation Mode, which enables you to you translate speech back and forth between languages. We began with just English and Spanish, but today we’re expanding to 14 languages, adding Brazilian Portuguese, Czech, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Polish, Russian and Turkish,” informs Google.
{ Thanks, Xavier. }