 Hello there, welcome back to my YouTube channel. This is Daniel Rossell bringing you today's video from Cork in Ireland for a change. Also using a different microphone, I love to leave the microphone names in the video description because people do ask me about them sometimes. This is a Samsung Q2U, which I've heard only good things about. I was very impressed with the audio quality the first time I used it. Usually I'm using the Audio Technica AT 2020, which is a podcasting microphone. This is a dynamic microphone, but I actually really think I was very impressed with the audio quality on this microphone. I want to talk today about the auto-translate captions feature on YouTube because I've done a number of videos about using it to learn Hebrew. I think for language learners learning languages via whatever media you can find, whether it's films or music videos, is just an incredible way to learn languages. And when YouTube rolled out this feature for Hebrew, it opened up a whole world of content to me. So people are asking questions, I can't get it to work, and I thought I'd cover or explain two reasons why that might be the case. So the first reason, and I've explained this in previous videos, is that currently this is only a feature available on YouTube desktop. So whether you're using YouTube from your computer or from your laptop, in other words, a desktop device. Now a couple of interesting articles reporting on this feature from March of this year, Google at their annual Dev conference explained the captioning and translating is going to be a big focus for the coming years. So they're currently really, really pushing out this feature. The feature, as I've explained in these videos, is that if you have captions in one language, let's say you have a YouTube video that has English captions. If you're watching that YouTube video from a compatible device like a desktop or like a media center, you'll get a little option called auto translate and you can translate those captions automatically in real time into any language in the world. So this is bringing amazing accessibility to YouTube. Firstly, as I said, for language learners. And secondly, for YouTube content creators who want to broaden their audience beyond the people who speak their language, incredible, incredibly powerful feature. Now the rollout is currently ongoing and the coverage I found from March of this year explained what languages YouTube have rolled this out. This is coming from Android Central. So they say the list is currently 16 languages, and it is an ongoing rollout. So if you have captions added to your video on one of these languages, you're going to be able to auto translate them. But at the moment, this is a list of the languages are Arabic, traditional Chinese, Dutch, English, French, German, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Thai. Now that's not always the case that I have been able to, as I mentioned for Hebrew, find a video that had Hebrew captions and then use auto translate to get them into English. So there are more languages being rolled out. But this list might actually reflect what's currently available on mobile devices. Because on mobile, the auto translate only works for certain languages. And as far as I'm aware, those are the languages that it'll work for those that limited Pood of 16. The rollout is currently ongoing. So hopefully in due course, YouTube is going to add auto translate captions to every language supported on the platform. But at the moment, this is the current state the rollout. Hope this video is interesting if you're also using the auto translate feature on YouTube for language learning, or you just want to make your videos accessible to more people than who speak your language. If you do want to get more info about YouTube on this channel, do subscribe. Thanks for watching.