Google is trying to eliminate the language barrier when it comes to email.
Despite all the major technological advancements over the last few decades, fundamentally changing the way we communicate with one another, the language barrier is something that has largely remained unshattered.
Now, Google wants to change that in a seamless and user-friendly way, such that creating a dialogue with people who don't know a single word of your language, and vice versa.
Automatic message translation was a feature that lived in Gmail's "Google Labs" section for quite some time, and now due to its popularity and brilliant accuracy in its execution, Google has decided to make it a native Gmail feature.
"We heard immediately from Google Apps for Business users that this was a killer feature for working with local teams across the world," wrote Gmail product manager Jeff Chin in the Official Gmail Blog.
"Some people just wanted to easily read newsletters from abroad. Another person wrote in telling us how he set up his mom
Despite all the major technological advancements over the last few decades, fundamentally changing the way we communicate with one another, the language barrier is something that has largely remained unshattered.

Now, Google wants to change that in a seamless and user-friendly way, such that creating a dialogue with people who don't know a single word of your language, and vice versa.
Automatic message translation was a feature that lived in Gmail's "Google Labs" section for quite some time, and now due to its popularity and brilliant accuracy in its execution, Google has decided to make it a native Gmail feature.
"We heard immediately from Google Apps for Business users that this was a killer feature for working with local teams across the world," wrote Gmail product manager Jeff Chin in the Official Gmail Blog.
"Some people just wanted to easily read newsletters from abroad. Another person wrote in telling us how he set up his mom