Original link: https://www.williamlong.info/archives/6939.html
Google Translate has also withdrawn from China. If you visit the localized domain name of the original Google Translate, you will be prompted to bookmark a new URL. The new URL is the address of Google Translate Hong Kong. After Google announced its withdrawal from China in 2010, only the “Google Translate” service and the “Google Maps” service were retained in China. Later, the Google Maps service was closed, and now, the last remaining Google translation service is also closed.
At present, when visiting the original Google Translate localized domain name translate.google.cn from China, it prompts “Please bookmark our website translate.google.com.hk”, but the new website cannot be accessed from China.
Google Translate is a free translation service provided by Google, which provides instant translation between 133 languages and supports translation of words, sentences and web pages between any two languages.
When Google Translate generates translations, it looks for patterns in millions of documents to determine the best translation for the user. Google Translate makes a reasonable guess by detecting patterns in human-translated documents, and then arriving at the appropriate translation. This process of finding various paradigms in large volumes of text is called “statistical machine translation”. Since translations are machine-generated, not all translations are perfect. This is why the accuracy of translations can sometimes vary from language to language.
This article is reprinted from: https://www.williamlong.info/archives/6939.html
This site is for inclusion only, and the copyright belongs to the original author.