The Edge browser is gaining a nifty little feature, Microsoft said at its Build conference: the ability to simply translate entire PDFs, wholesale.
Today, translation works across entire webpages rather fluidly. If you open a webpage in German, for example, your browser will either translate its entirety automatically, or you can do it in a click. But certain documents aren’t designed to be as flexible — namely Adobe Acrobat files, or .PDFs.
Right now, you can highlight a passage on a PDF in Edge, right-click it, and hunt down the “translate selection” option. That opens a pane on the right-hand side of the browser, in which the passage is detected and translated. Naturally, going line by line through, say, an instruction manual to translate it all is a pain.
Microsoft hopes to fix this.
“Microsoft Edge will be able to translate full pages of PDFs from more than 70 languages,” Microsoft said at its Build developer conference. “With just a few clicks, users will be able to open a PDF in Edge, click the Translate icon in the Edge address bar and quickly create a new document fully translated into the language of choice. Users will get real-time translations of entire PDF documents, eliminating the struggle to understand important documents.”

Mark Hachman / Foundry
Microsoft says that this feature is available within the Canary version of Microsoft Edge, but I haven’t been able to find it. In any event, Microsoft promises that this feature to auto-generate a translated PDF will be added to Microsoft Edge beginning in June.
Jelentkezéshez jelentkezzen be
EGYÉB POSTS Ebben a csoportban

Microsoft says it used its own agentic reasoning AI model to help dev

Gaming keyboard or ergonomic keyboard? You typically have to choose.

You’ve probably barely become used to interacting with ChatGPT, Copil

A new command-line application, Windows Edit, is coming to Windows 11

Microsoft is waiving the fee to sign up and publish to the Microsoft


Back in the older versions of Windows, there used to be a handy featu