Ijet worldcue

Author: o | 2025-04-24

★★★★☆ (4.4 / 2204 reviews)

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Worldcue® Translator In order to use this app your company must be a WorldAware, Inc. and/or its parents and subsidiaries (“WA”) client and have a current license to our Worldcue® Translator solution.Provides users with easy access to a bi-directional translator tool from WorldAware's Worldcue® Mobile app. Features include:- Support for over 100 countries- Over 2,000 phrases per language in 13 languages - More than 30,000 professionally recorded audio files- An instant voice translator in 42 languages- An image translator (ideal for signs, menus, etc.)- A 10,000 word offline dictionary- Audio lessons!- An intelligent tip calculator & currency converter- Built-in flashcards and a quiz mode to help you learn- A “culture crash course” to get familiar with local customs and etiquette- A "Wi-fi Dialer" that allows you to call any international phone number- Includes “one-tap” access back to WorldAware's Worldcue Mobile app Quick Connect feature*Additional fees apply Additional APP Information Latest Version 6.1.2 Requires Android Android 4.0+ What's New in the Latest Version 6.1.2 Last updated on Apr 26, 2019 Speed improvements, updated culture notes and improvements to the voice and image translator. Worldcue® Translator Screenshots Also available for other platforms iJET Worldcue Related by string. iJet: Marty Pfinsgraff iJet. PRNewswire iJET Intelligent. iJET Travel. iJET Intelligent Risk. iJet Intelligent Risk. iJET / : Worldcue. Worldcue R Related by Pros: A combination of an iPod dock with a powerful, color-screened remote control capable of closely emulating the iPod’s audio and video menus, enabling users to access any song from an iPod’s catalog at any time, with clean sound. Works reliably and quickly from distances of over 100 feet away, includes audio cable, USB cable, and wall charger. Cons: High price will deter all but hard-core users. Button-based menu scrolling can be tedious. Despite S-Video support,access to video content is glitchy, and composite video out is not supported by dock; cable must be purchased separately and connected to iPod’s top. Cannot use remote’s menu system and iPod’s own controls at same time, but can use remote in Simple mode with iPod shuffle-like button access. Power off (sleep) feature hidden in a menu. Marketed as “more than remote control” for your iPod, Keyspan’s TuneView – the second LCD screened remote control system for iPods – has just arrived in final form. As promised when it was first announced some months ago, TuneView consists of a full iPod dock and a color LCD-equipped RF remote control, plus an audio cable, USB cable, and wall charger. Together, these parts allow you to connect your iPod to a home stereo system – or, with your own S-Video cable, a TV – and have complete, high-fidelity access to its music and video menus and libraries from 150 feet away, potentially more, according to the company.As we noted in our review of ABT’s previously-released iJet Two-Way LCD Remote for iPod (iLounge rating: C+), the idea of an LCD screen-equipped remote for the iPod has been a holy grail for some time now: while it’s fine to be able to skip forward or backward, iPod shuffle-style, through a home stereo-connected iPod’s library from a distance, many people have wanted to have true iPod-style menu access, and traditional remotes just can’t do that. Unlike iJet Two-Way, KeySpan’s TuneView for iPod ($179) comes admirably close to achieving this challenging goal, but at an iPod-rivaling price that will appeal only to hard-core iPod enthusiasts and/or wealthy users. Post-Review Update: A

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User2934

Worldcue® Translator In order to use this app your company must be a WorldAware, Inc. and/or its parents and subsidiaries (“WA”) client and have a current license to our Worldcue® Translator solution.Provides users with easy access to a bi-directional translator tool from WorldAware's Worldcue® Mobile app. Features include:- Support for over 100 countries- Over 2,000 phrases per language in 13 languages - More than 30,000 professionally recorded audio files- An instant voice translator in 42 languages- An image translator (ideal for signs, menus, etc.)- A 10,000 word offline dictionary- Audio lessons!- An intelligent tip calculator & currency converter- Built-in flashcards and a quiz mode to help you learn- A “culture crash course” to get familiar with local customs and etiquette- A "Wi-fi Dialer" that allows you to call any international phone number- Includes “one-tap” access back to WorldAware's Worldcue Mobile app Quick Connect feature*Additional fees apply Additional APP Information Latest Version 6.1.2 Requires Android Android 4.0+ What's New in the Latest Version 6.1.2 Last updated on Apr 26, 2019 Speed improvements, updated culture notes and improvements to the voice and image translator. Worldcue® Translator Screenshots Also available for other platforms

2025-04-20
User6394

Pros: A combination of an iPod dock with a powerful, color-screened remote control capable of closely emulating the iPod’s audio and video menus, enabling users to access any song from an iPod’s catalog at any time, with clean sound. Works reliably and quickly from distances of over 100 feet away, includes audio cable, USB cable, and wall charger. Cons: High price will deter all but hard-core users. Button-based menu scrolling can be tedious. Despite S-Video support,access to video content is glitchy, and composite video out is not supported by dock; cable must be purchased separately and connected to iPod’s top. Cannot use remote’s menu system and iPod’s own controls at same time, but can use remote in Simple mode with iPod shuffle-like button access. Power off (sleep) feature hidden in a menu. Marketed as “more than remote control” for your iPod, Keyspan’s TuneView – the second LCD screened remote control system for iPods – has just arrived in final form. As promised when it was first announced some months ago, TuneView consists of a full iPod dock and a color LCD-equipped RF remote control, plus an audio cable, USB cable, and wall charger. Together, these parts allow you to connect your iPod to a home stereo system – or, with your own S-Video cable, a TV – and have complete, high-fidelity access to its music and video menus and libraries from 150 feet away, potentially more, according to the company.As we noted in our review of ABT’s previously-released iJet Two-Way LCD Remote for iPod (iLounge rating: C+), the idea of an LCD screen-equipped remote for the iPod has been a holy grail for some time now: while it’s fine to be able to skip forward or backward, iPod shuffle-style, through a home stereo-connected iPod’s library from a distance, many people have wanted to have true iPod-style menu access, and traditional remotes just can’t do that. Unlike iJet Two-Way, KeySpan’s TuneView for iPod ($179) comes admirably close to achieving this challenging goal, but at an iPod-rivaling price that will appeal only to hard-core iPod enthusiasts and/or wealthy users. Post-Review Update: A

2025-04-09
User4645

Tend to agree with this, and though currently available options for the iPod fall just shy of CD quality sound, much of the music on iPods falls short as well.TuneView and ABT’s iJet Two-Way approach the situation differently, and to their credit, from the angle of superior performance. Both are intended to link a Dock Connector-equipped 4G, 5G, mini or nano iPod directly to a stereo system, eliminating concerns over audio fidelity, as well as offer at least triple the distance performance of Bluetooth systems, plus on-screen navigation of the iPod’s content. Both systems enable you to walk one room, two rooms, or even a flight of stairs away, and still control the iPod’s playback – conceptually great if you’re listening from outdoors, distance DJing for a party, or just moving around throughout your home.Though ambitious, the biggest problem with iJet Two-Way was that the quality of its navigation experience was marginal, which we found unacceptable given its high price. By contrast, TuneView is even more expensive, but it virtually replicates the iPod menu navigation experience; while not perfect, both its user experience and overall package are substantially better values for the dollar.The Package: Contents and OmissionsWhen it was first announced some months ago, TuneView was going to be sold in separate pieces: a color LCD-equipped RF remote control for $99 and a full iPod dock for $79. Since they wouldn’t do much good without one another, Keyspan now sells both pieces in the same box, and includes an minijack-to-RCA-style audio cable, USB cable, and wall charger. Together, these parts allow you to connect your iPod to a home stereo system – or, with your own S-Video cable, a TV – and have complete, high-fidelity access to iPod music and video content from up to 150 feet away. You can attach the wall charger to the USB cable to charge your iPod while in the dock – the combination is a bit unwieldy in shape for packed power strips – or detach the charger and use the dock for iPod synchronization with your computer.Other than its black coloration, Keyspan’s TuneView

2025-03-29
User1565

Dock is highly similar in design and limitations to the company’s earlier AV Dock for iPod: there’s an iPod Universal Dock well in the center, and three black Dock Adapters in the box; today’s iPods include white inserts that will alternately fit inside. The front face has a single LED that glows whenever a command is entered on the remote; on the back, there’s a port labeled Line Out, another for S-Video Out, and finally, a USB port for use with the included cable and charger. It’s worth a note that TuneView needn’t have come with a full-fledged dock – ABT’s iJet Two-Way includes only a Dock Connecting adapter that fits into many other dock or speaker systems. While modestly more limiting – if your iPod-specific speaker system is one of the rare ones without an auxiliary-in audio port, you can’t use it with TuneView – Keyspan’s decision to include a dock here was ultimately the right one. Without a separately purchased dock of some sort, an iPod connected to iJet Two-Way ultimately won’t look right or charge while in use; TuneView’s solution handles both of these concerns. It’s also ready to be attached with only small inconveniences to any existing stereo you may have, or a home AV system.Regrettably, TuneView neither includes nor allows direct-to-dock connection of a composite video cable – its Line Out port is solely for audio, and doesn’t carry a video signal. As with the AV Dock for iPod, you’ll need to go out and buy a $19 Apple (or third-party) AV Cable, then connect it to the top of your iPod if you want to output video, or go out and buy your own S-Video cable if you want to use TuneView with a TV set. We were willing to forgive these omissions in the AV Dock because of its extremely aggressive pricing, but for $179, we’d expect to find both a video cable in the box and composite video-out support in the TuneView dock – every other docking solution in its price range includes both. When asked about this issue, Keyspan said that

2025-03-28

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