By
Karandeep Singh Oberoi
Published Feb 4, 2026, 5:24 PM EST
Karandeep Singh Oberoi is a Durham College Journalism and Mass Media graduate who joined the Android Police team in April 2024, after serving as a full-time News Writer at Canadian publication MobileSyrup.
Prior to joining Android Police, Oberoi worked on feature stories, reviews, evergreen articles, and focused on 'how-to' resources.
Additionally, he informed readers about the latest deals and discounts with quick hit pieces and buyer's guides for all occasions.
Oberoi lives in Toronto, Canada. When not working on a new story, he likes to hit the gym, play soccer (although he keeps calling it football for some reason🤔) and try out new restaurants in the Greater Toronto Area.
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Ever since COVID-19, video conferencing apps have been a staple web tool in almost every working professional and student's life. Platforms like Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Zoom, and more have constantly gained new bells and whistles since, with Google now looking to abolish language barriers with its latest Google Meet feature expansion.
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What is Google Meet?
Google Meet is an easy way to stay connected with family and friends wherever you go
Posts By Zach Gray-TraversoGoogle Meet on computers supports real-time speech translation. Unlike translated captions, speech translation allows participants to speak in their native language, while the platform translates the speech in real-time into spoken sentences, essentially preserving the "flow of conversation by creating an audio translation dubbed over the original speech that mimics the speaker’s tone and speaking cadence."
Up until now, this feature has been limited to Google Meet on computers. Leaks recently suggested that the feature might make its way to the platform's mobile apps, and that's exactly what's happening now.
In a new Workspace updates post announcing speech translation's general availability for businesses, the tech giant also announced the feature's mobile expansion.
You can't try it out just yet
Speech translation will roll out to the Meet Android and iOS apps in the coming months.
In addition to the mobile expansion, the tech giant also indicated that it will make visual updates to the speech translation user interface. This applies to the feature's UI on computers. Additionally, Google will also make refinements to translation accuracy and nuance, which should apply to the feature on all surfaces.
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Subscribing to our newsletter provides focused coverage of Google Meet's speech translation — from mobile expansion and UI changes to accuracy refinements — and thoughtful reporting on related product developments. Subscribe By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.It's worth noting that speech translation is limited to Business Standard and Plus, Enterprise Standard and Plus. Frontline Plus, Google AI Pro and Ultra customers. Those with a Google AI Ultra for Business add-on or a Google AI Pro for Education add-on can also access the feature.
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Subscribing to our newsletter provides focused coverage of Google Meet's speech translation — from mobile expansion and UI changes to accuracy refinements — and thoughtful reporting on related product developments. Subscribe By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime. Trending Now
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