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| Franklin TG-490 Speaking Translator | 
enlarge | Brand: Franklin Electronics Category: CE
List Price: $229.99 Buy New: $199.99 You Save: $30.00 (13%)
New (3) from $199.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews
Media: Electronics Fragile: No Batteries Included: Yes System Memory: 85 Memory Type: Unknown Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 5 x 1 x 3
MPN: TGA-490 Model: TGA-490 UPC: 084793997457 EAN: 0084793997457 ASIN: B000IYY9JQ
Release Date: August 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 3-4 business days
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| Features:
| | Speaks over 200,000 Translations and 12,000 Travel Phrases in high quality synthesized and recorded speech | | | Includes Japanese, Korean and Mandarin Chinese plus French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Russian, Polish, Portuguese and English | | | Features Roman letters and Asian characters | | | Local/World time clock and databank/User word list | | | Calculator with metric and currency converters |
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| Similar Items:
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Almost as essential as your passport, the Speaking Global Translator contains over 450,000 words and 12,000 phrases, and speaks 115,000 words in recorded human voice. Ideal for communicating on almost any continent with 12 languages and translations to and from Chinese (Mandarin), Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. Enter a word in your native language and this indispensable travel tool will speak and show the translation in your language and the language you seek. A voice recording feature allows you to record custom words and phrases appropriate to travel or business needs. Spell correction feature finds even misspelled words. 7-line screen aids visibility in this lightweight unit. 1 rechargeable battery included
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
Great value, great features. September 18, 2008 This little translator is just what I was looking for for my trip to Italy. It's compact, light, and full of features. Having an alarm clock is expected, but still nice. The ability to play mp3s is a nice bonus as well. The translation was solid, and it was very easy to use even for older people who had never seen a device like this. The only reason I don't give it a full five stars is because it didn't have a full word to word translation. Some abstract words and concepts were present only within a sentence. Overall, though, excellent bargain.
average August 5, 2008 Overall is nice compact translator however the screen is very hard to read. They should have made the font display much larger.
Best Speaking Translator I've seen June 13, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I recently purchased & returned other speaking translators (voice phrase books / talking dictionaries) from other companies (other brands). This Franklin model is by far the best: clear, natural, speaking voice, vs. a computer-generated "robot voice", with others. My only criticism is that the speaking voice is too fast. At least it can be repeated as often as necessary.
lousy light May 24, 2008 The translation and language portion of this product work fine. The problem is in the visibility of the screen. In the days when we can use a cell phone as a flashlight, this screen is very difficult to view even in good light. It's like going back to the early days of portable devices. I have some problems with the user interface, things like a next and previous button to return to a search you want to modify. But overall, you can find what you're looking for fairly easily.
Defect (?). Limited vocabulary. April 14, 2008 Perhaps I received a dud, but the backlight stopped working literally after about 8 uses, making the poorly contrasted screen nearly impossible to see unless you're directly under a lamp or in a very brightly lit area.
Also, while it works just fine as a "word-to-word" translator, it's too hard and cumbersome to look up sentenses and phrases quickly, and you can't enter your own.
The speaking voice is however, better than other translators that I've seen, but they do tend to speak the phrases (when you find them) too quickly so they sound blended together. The purpose of one of these things is so we can LEARN a new language, so they should speak more slowly, not as quickly as a native speaker of that language can speak. duh. The Spanish voice and Chinese voices are the clearest. The Japanese and Russian voices sound muffled and are hard to make out.
If this were under $100 I'd say it's fine for what it is. With an average retail price of $200 however, it's got too many flaws to recommend it.
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