Didn’t notice until today that Kagi has a translation service. Simple, works well. This’ll be my new default instead of Google.

@heyloura I’ve also started using Kagi translate more often. If I find myself in a situation where the person I am speaking to does not have a translate app with them, but is familiar with Google Translate, I’ll use that. But yes, definitely making more use of Kagi.
I really like it, especially the variety of options it provides for any given translation that are idiomatic and geographically relevant. Plus, no Google 👍

@manton I’m intrigued I’ll test it thanks for sharing! :)
Their claims on this post https://blog.kagi.com/kagi-translate seem very ambitious to me. I'm going to compare it with Deepl that I use heavily on a daily basis.
I find it hard to believe that a recent tool like Kagi, which isn't a specialist, is better than Deepl (pro or free version is not detailed).
In any case, Kagi seems to have some interesting features, especially when it comes to accessing websites.
I’ve been trying to use it for Finnish, not quite on Google Translate level yet unfortunately. But will keep an eye on it for future improvements for sure.

@jrouet We’d love for you to explore its unique features more extensively and see how it truly stands out from the rest 🙂

I just learned about it a few days ago and installed their Android app. It has an app shortcut and I can copy text from one app and share to that app shortcut to translate.
I like it so far because not only does it translate Georgian, it also will translate Georgian that has been transliterated into Latin characters. Google translate wouldn’t work for that.
