Bing Translator vs S Translator
March 20, 2025 | Author: Adam Levine
4★
Bing Translator is a user facing translation portal provided by Microsoft as part of its Bing services to translate texts or entire web pages into different languages. All translation pairs are powered by the Microsoft Translator statistical machine translation platform and web service, developed by Microsoft Research, as its backend translation software.
3★
Samsung S Translator gives you an easy way to quickly translate spoken words or entered text into several languages. S Translator supports Brazilian Portuguese, English (UK), English (US), French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Simplified Chinese, and Spanish.
The universe is vast, confusing and full of languages nobody understands, which is why both Bing Translator and S Translator exist—to take a valiant, if slightly error-prone, stab at making communication a little less baffling. They both cheerfully promise to turn one language into another, often with results that range from impressive to "well, that’s certainly a sentence." Both can handle text, speech and even the occasional blurry photo of a menu you were too embarrassed to ask a waiter about. They’re also handy in places where Wi-Fi is a distant memory, assuming you remembered to download the right language pack before venturing into the void.
Bing Translator, a noble creation from the house of Microsoft (est. 1975, also responsible for Clippy), has been at this translation business since 2007 and fancies itself quite the professional. It integrates smoothly with Windows, Office and other things you vaguely meant to read the manual for. If you’re a business, traveler or just someone with an inexplicable desire to translate Klingon, Bing Translator is eager to assist. It even offers real-time conversations, which means you can now misunderstand people at the speed of sound.
Meanwhile, S Translator, a Samsung invention from the distant year of 2013, prefers to keep things simple, exclusive and comfortably nestled inside the warm embrace of Galaxy smartphones. Designed for travelers who want to confidently butcher local phrases, it has a more limited vocabulary but makes up for it by always being right there in your pocket. Unlike Bing Translator, it doesn’t bother with fancy web versions or deep corporate integration—because, let’s be honest, its users are more interested in ordering coffee than drafting multilingual business contracts.
See also: Top 10 Online Translators
Bing Translator, a noble creation from the house of Microsoft (est. 1975, also responsible for Clippy), has been at this translation business since 2007 and fancies itself quite the professional. It integrates smoothly with Windows, Office and other things you vaguely meant to read the manual for. If you’re a business, traveler or just someone with an inexplicable desire to translate Klingon, Bing Translator is eager to assist. It even offers real-time conversations, which means you can now misunderstand people at the speed of sound.
Meanwhile, S Translator, a Samsung invention from the distant year of 2013, prefers to keep things simple, exclusive and comfortably nestled inside the warm embrace of Galaxy smartphones. Designed for travelers who want to confidently butcher local phrases, it has a more limited vocabulary but makes up for it by always being right there in your pocket. Unlike Bing Translator, it doesn’t bother with fancy web versions or deep corporate integration—because, let’s be honest, its users are more interested in ordering coffee than drafting multilingual business contracts.
See also: Top 10 Online Translators