InnAIO AI Translator T10 review: Packed with features but needs work


The T10 also includes a voice reproduction feature similar to the one it offers Vasco Q1 and the Google Pixel 10. Using this function, you can read out some sample sentences, press the “Clone” button, and in a few minutes, you can have the T10 speaking in an imitation of your voice instead of generic “male” or “female” tones. This system is even more impressive than Vasco’s, based on my testing, as my cloned voice sounds eerily similar to my own, with a rich Spanish, Russian, or Tamil accent applied. Note that by default, the application can only store one cloned audio at a time.

The 60 mAh battery charges via USB-C and promises 15 hours of continuous use and 100 days of standby time. It’s difficult to test this accurately, as the device automatically turns itself off after just a few minutes of non-use. Despite many hours of testing over several days, the in-app battery indicator never fluctuated from a 100 percent charge.

Subscription payment

The T10 is a capable, if complex, translation system, and I’d be more enamored with it if it weren’t for the fact that it only includes 180 days of service before you’re pressured to upgrade to one of the two subscription plans. For $14 per month or $100 per year, you receive 600 minutes per month of service across several real-time features. For $25 per month or $179 per year, this goes to unlimited service (and adds a second slot for audio reproduction). Without a subscription, users get only 120 minutes of real-time translations per month and miss out on call translation and AI Mind Map features entirely. In-app translation, face-to-face, and text/image translation are available for free in all modes.

Another major issue I had with the T10 is how difficult the InnAIO Pro is to implement. The poorly translated interface is particularly worrying, not only because much of it is written in pidgin English but because some of it has not been translated at all. For example, if you save a recording of an interpretation session, the identities of the two languages ​​used in the recording will appear in Chinese.

The T10 has a fresh approach and some unique features you won’t find in competing hardware or in a phone app, but at the moment, it’s all too haphazard and undercooked to fully recommend. Being pushed for a very expensive subscription after such a short period of free access makes this calculus even more difficult.

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