Review cover Timekettle Fluentalk T1 Handheld Translator (Hardware)
Official GBAtemp Review

Product Information:

¿No hablas español? Avez-vous déjà eu envie de communiquer en France? Well with the Fluentalk T1 you can communicate with people all around the world. But is it worth the cost? Dive in to find out.

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Do you plan to travel the world one day? Perhaps you’re a busy businessperson with clients from all walks of life? Or, most likely, you just want to play 100+ hour long JRPG’s that have no English translation. The Fluentalk T1 Language Translator is here and promises to solve all those problems, and more. However, the question is whether this little offline translator can get the job done. That is the question that this review will attempt to answer.

For reference, I am a traveling lawyer by day and hopeless PlayStation Platinum trophy hunter at night—so I often run into situations where I need to communicate with others that may not speak English as a native language. That’s why I jumped at the opportunity to test the Fluentalk T1 to see if it would provide exactly what I needed to communicate with people who speak different languages.

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The T1 Translator can work offline or online via Wi-Fi or a sim card. Initially, I was surprised that the device asked me to insert a sim card because, well, I didn’t have one that I could dedicate to this device. Luckily, it didn’t take long for me to figure out that I could simply skip that step and connect the device to Wi-Fi. When the device is connected to the internet, it an translate in 40 languages and with 93 different accents. What is unique to this device when compared to other translators is that this one can be used offline as well as online. When used offline, it can still translate 13 of the world’s most popular languages including English, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, French, Russian, and German.

attachFull340103What I consider to be probably the most unique feature of this translator is that it features image translation on it’s 4-inch screen. In essence, that means that you can take a picture with the device’s camera of a text image and it will try its best to accurately translate it to one or more of 40 other languages. To test the screen recognition, I took a couple of screenshots of the loading tips for Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp in English and then translated those images to Spanish with the T1 Translator. I then took screenshots of the official Spanish translation of each of those loadings tips to compare. See the below screenshots for reference.

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Wanting to test the accuracy of a less-common language, I employed GBAtemp’s very own AlanJohn to speak to me in his native language of Ukrainian to see if we could hold a conversation. While there were certainly some kinks in the quality of the translation, I was able to understand the general idea of what he was trying to get across. 

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I found that in general the quality of the translations are at least on par with Google translate. There is also a slightly hidden feature of the device that lets you select commonly said phrases and it will speak it in your chosen language at the push of a button. With this feature, you will always be able to find a bathroom.

Device Specifications

Size

4.59 x 2.30 x 0.01 in (116.8 * 58.6 * 11.2mm)

Weight

0.25 Lb (115g)

CPU

Quad-core ARM 14nm 2.0GHz

Storage

3GB Ram, 32GB Rom

Operating System

Android 10

Screen size

4.0'Oncell 540*1080

Camera

8 megapixels

Microphone

Multi-channel microphone

Speaker

Two speakers

Charging

Type-C 5V⎓1A

Batteries

1500mAh

Technology Connectivity

WiFi/Nano-sim/E-sim(built-in)

Wireles Network Technology

2G/3G/4G LTE

Continuous Translation Time

3.5 hours

Standby Time

96 hours

Charging Time

210 minutes

The device is a bit pricy at $300 on Amazon, however at the time of writing this review I was able to find it on sale via Fluentalk’s website for $225. I would say that the price is worth it for those who expect to regularly use its features. While you can get a lot of similar functionality out of a smartphone, I would argue that it is better to use a dedicated device with dual speakers like the T1 since you just know that it works.

Purchase Link

Amazon: https://a.co/d/bPZwNi1

Verdict

What We Liked ...
  • Offline functionality makes it easy to communicate in the world's top languages from anywhere
  • Can connect to internet via wi-fi or nano-SIM card
  • Great translation accuracy for most languages
  • Photo translation feature distinguishes it from much of the competition
  • One-click translation is fast and user-friendly
What We Didn't Like ...
  • Translations for less popular languages can be iffy
  • A bit pricey at its retail value of $300
  • Conversation mode can overwhelm the device before long. You're better off using one-click translation mode
8
out of 10

Overall

The Fluentalk T1 is a very handy universal translator that works both online and offline. While technology has still yet gotten to a point where on-the-fly translation works perfectly, this nifty device does an excellent job of helping people communicate.
According to the official website, you get offline translations only to (or from) Chinese and English. You can't do French to German for example. For that you would need to go from French to English (or Chinese) and then to German.

My other complain is the number of supported languages Offline are just 8, the online mode has some notable missings like Serbian, Polish and all African languages.
 
I have to ask, why can’t this just be an app? I am already carrying a phone and really not sure why I should have to buy this over just downloading an app. I would even be willing to pay for the app if it’s about making money.
 
I have to ask, why can’t this just be an app? I am already carrying a phone and really not sure why I should have to buy this over just downloading an app. I would even be willing to pay for the app if it’s about making money.
Deepl has an app that can do a lot of stuff and it's very sophisticated translations, like non-English idioms are translated into the English equivalent rather than a direct translation of words.
 
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@Ericzander, does the device allow for offline vocal translation, or text only?

Are you aware that Google translate allows real time (offline) image translation (via overlay)? It's also convenient if you want to copy/paste text from reality to your text editors with OCR (with the option to translate them at the same time).

It looks like this device might have a niche use case, but I'm having trouble seeing it.
 
Only benefit I see is you can do translation without sending data to google.
You can use google translate offline by downloading the languages you want and if you really worry about it sending data when you turn the internet back on, you can just use an app to force google translate to think its offline permanently. There's essentially no benefit to this product.
 
Would be interesting if you compared it to different translation services to see what offers the more accurate solution. Right now it more or less just sounds like a dedicated Google Translate device.
 
I'd like to see a teardown of this device, because it sure as hell looks like a locked-down custom UI and ugly-ass case wrapped around a $20 ZTE phone. I'd bet you could dump and sideload most of the relevant translation tools onto a much cheaper slab.
 
Since it's based on android, what is the name of the translator's app? I will hunt the APK and get a superior revision/model of that translator device
 
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So, it's basically a cheap Android phone with a translation app. Not sure I understand why this had to be made as dedicated hardware or what benefits there are to it over using an app on your smartphone. It's just another thing you have to carry around.
 
I have to ask, why can’t this just be an app? I am already carrying a phone and really not sure why I should have to buy this over just downloading an app. I would even be willing to pay for the app if it’s about making money.
I'm only going to reply to you because I love you and everyone else is just circlejerking.

Would you really hold your phone out in front of a stranger, perhaps in a foreign country, rather than a specifically designed product? This translator holds zero value compared to your average tourist phone. I'd rather use something like this, that I'm 100% sure no one is going to steal from me, than my phone.
 
I'm only going to reply to you because I love you and everyone else is just circlejerking.

Would you really hold your phone out in front of a stranger, perhaps in a foreign country, rather than a specifically designed product? This translator holds zero value compared to your average tourist phone. I'd rather use something like this, that I'm 100% sure no one is going to steal from me, than my phone.
Love ya too <3
I agree that I won’t do that but I also won’t hold this out either since it cost 300$. I would rather buy a cheaper smartphone and download the app instead.
 
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    I just dislike that they don't let me choose the voices before the game starts. Happened with botw as well, had to change to japanese and restart.
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    But the important question is can you choose gender
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