immersive translate logoImmersive Translate
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The Ultimate
AI Translator
for Web, PDFs and Videos

Immersive Translate is a free, bilingual AI translation tool that supports website translation, PDF translation with original layouts preserved, video subtitle translation (YouTube, Netflix), online meeting translation, image translation, and comic translation—all in one platform. Powered by AI terminology libraries and context-aware translation, it integrates over 20 leading translation engines, including ChatGPT, DeepL, DeepSeek, and Gemini, and supports more than 100 language pairs. Available on Chrome, Edge, iOS, and mobile devices.
google
openAI
Gemini
DeepL
Microsoft
Tencent Smart
Volctrans
Youdao
DeepSeek
Baidu
Niu
Caiyun
Tencent
OpenL
BigModel
SiliconFlow
google
openAI
Gemini
DeepL
Microsoft
Tencent Smart
Volctrans
Youdao
DeepSeek
Baidu
Niu
Caiyun
Tencent
OpenL
BigModel
SiliconFlow
google
openAI
Gemini
DeepL
Microsoft
Tencent Smart
Volctrans
Youdao
DeepSeek
Baidu
Niu
Caiyun
Tencent
OpenL
BigModel
SiliconFlow

Your All-in-One AI Translation Solution

Immersive Translate helps you break language barriers when communicating with international clients, partners, or colleagues. Here are some of the most popular ways to use Immersive Translate's AI Translator.

What is CNET?

CNET is a leading American technology news and reviews platform covering consumer electronics, software, and digital trends. For non-English speakers, its in-depth tech analysis and product reviews remain inaccessible due to language barriers, limiting their ability to make informed purchasing decisions.

Need a CNET translator?

You want to read CNET's tech reviews in your native language without constant tab-switching. Traditional tools break CNET's layout, hide original product names and specs, deliver unreliable translations for technical terminology, and force you to choose between reading the original or a machine-translated version—never both simultaneously.

What Immersive Translate Delivers for CNET

Immersive Translate keeps you on CNET's page while displaying original and translated tech articles side by side. Its intelligent content area recognition isolates the article body from ads, sidebars, and related stories — translating only what matters. Bilingual mode preserves original text for verifying technical terminology and product names, while AI-powered translation handles tech jargon and formal registers with accuracy across 100+ language pairs.

Read foreign websites with bilingual context

1

Open the original webpage you actually want to read

Start from the live source instead of switching to copied text elsewhere.

2

Turn on Immersive Translate and keep both languages together

Read the translation while still checking the original wording and structure.

3

Follow posts, comments, and articles without losing context

Stay accurate when browsing social media, forums, and news across languages.

Complete CNET Translation Solution Built-In

Immersive Translate delivers a seamless, intelligent translation experience for CNET and all tech news sites — bilingual display, smart content filtering, and 20+ AI engines in one tool.
Smart Article Recognition
Smart Article Recognition

Automatically identifies and translates only the main article content on CNET, filtering out ads, sidebars, recommended stories, and navigation clutter for distraction-free tech news reading.

Bilingual Side-by-Side Display

Original English and your native language shown paragraph by paragraph — verify product names, technical terms, and exact quotes from CNET reviews without losing source context.

Bilingual Side-by-Side Display
20+ Translation Engines
20+ Translation Engines

Switch between DeepL, OpenAI, Google Translate, DeepSeek, and 20+ AI models instantly — choose the best engine for accurate tech terminology and natural CNET article translation.

Works on Any Tech Site

No special setup required — translates CNET, TechCrunch, The Verge, Ars Technica, and any other tech news or review site with the same intelligent, inline translation experience.

Works on Any Tech Site
Hover for Instant Translation
Hover for Instant Translation

Mouse over any headline, paragraph, or product spec on CNET to get an instant translation on demand — scan articles quickly without translating the entire page first.

100+ Languages, Fully Customizable

Read CNET in any of 100+ languages with adjustable font size, color, and display modes — bilingual, translation-only, or hover — tailored to your exact reading preference.

100+ Languages, Fully Customizable

Who Uses CNET Translators

Breaking Language Barriers

Breaking Language Barriers

Global tech followers read CNET reviews in native languages while preserving original product names and technical specifications for accurate understanding.
Smart Purchase Decisions

Smart Purchase Decisions

International consumers compare product reviews and buying guides bilingually, verifying technical details and pricing information before making purchase decisions.
Cross-Reference Tech Sources

Cross-Reference Tech Sources

Tech writers reference CNET's original English coverage alongside translations, ensuring accurate citation of product launches and industry trends for articles.

CNET Website Translator: Frequently Asked Questions

Does Immersive Translate work on CNET and other tech news websites?
Yes, Immersive Translate works seamlessly on CNET and virtually all tech news websites including TechCrunch, The Verge, Wired, Ars Technica, and ZDNet. The extension intelligently recognizes CNET's main content area—article body, headlines, and product reviews—while automatically skipping navigation bars, ad blocks, and sidebar widgets. This means you get clean, readable translations of the actual news content without cluttering your screen with translated menus or promotional elements. Whether you're reading CNET's product reviews, breaking tech news, or how-to guides, the translation appears inline without breaking the site's original layout or functionality.
Will translating CNET break the website layout or interfere with images and videos?
No, Immersive Translate preserves CNET's original layout completely. Unlike some translation tools that proxy or rebuild the page, Immersive Translate injects translations directly into the existing webpage structure. All embedded videos, product images, comparison charts, and interactive elements remain fully functional. The bilingual mode displays the original paragraph first, followed by the translation below it, maintaining CNET's responsive design across desktop and mobile. Ads and sidebars stay in their original positions untranslated, so the site's monetization and navigation structure remain intact. You can still click through to related articles, watch video reviews, and interact with the page exactly as intended.
Can I see the original English text after translating CNET articles?
Absolutely. This is one of Immersive Translate's core strengths for news readers. The bilingual mode displays the original English paragraph above and your native language translation below, allowing you to cross-reference technical terms, product names, and exact quotes instantly. This is especially valuable on CNET where precise terminology matters—you can verify how a product feature was originally described or check the exact wording of a company statement. If you prefer a cleaner reading experience, you can switch to translation-only mode, which replaces the source text entirely. There's also a mouse hover translation feature: simply hover over any paragraph to see its translation without translating the entire page, perfect for quickly checking specific sections of a long CNET review.
How is Immersive Translate different from Google Translate page translation for reading CNET?
The key difference is workflow and flexibility. Google Translate's page translation navigates you away from CNET to a proxied version of the page, often breaking interactive elements and sometimes triggering CNET's paywall or login requirements. Immersive Translate keeps you on the actual CNET website—your login status, bookmarks, and comment interactions all work normally. More importantly, Immersive Translate offers bilingual display, showing original and translation side by side, while Google Translate only shows the translated version, cutting you off from the source text. You also get access to 20+ translation engines beyond Google—including DeepL, OpenAI, DeepSeek, and Claude—all switchable from one interface. For tech news where terminology accuracy matters, being able to compare different AI translation engines on the same CNET article is invaluable.
Which languages does Immersive Translate support for translating CNET content?
Immersive Translate supports 100+ language pairs, covering all major languages that CNET readers might need. You can translate CNET's English content into Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Russian, Japanese, Korean, Chinese (Simplified and Traditional), Arabic, Hindi, and dozens more. The translation works in both directions—if you're reading CNET's international editions or foreign-language tech news sites, you can translate them into English or any other supported language. The language detection is automatic: Immersive Translate recognizes that CNET is in English and translates to your preset target language. You can also set different target languages for different websites, so CNET always translates to your preferred language while other sites use different settings.
Which translation engine gives the best results for CNET tech articles and product reviews?
For CNET's tech content, DeepL and OpenAI models consistently deliver the most natural, context-aware translations, especially for technical terminology and product descriptions. DeepL excels at maintaining the professional tone of CNET's reviews and handles tech jargon well. OpenAI's ChatGPT models understand context deeply, making them excellent for translating nuanced product comparisons and editorial opinions. For highly technical articles with specialized terminology, DeepSeek and Claude also perform exceptionally well. The beauty of Immersive Translate is that you can switch between these 20+ engines instantly—if one translation feels awkward, try another with a single click. Many users start with DeepL for general CNET articles and switch to AI models like ChatGPT or DeepSeek when reading in-depth technical reviews or how-to guides where context and explanation matter more than literal translation.
Can I customize how translations appear on CNET and control what gets translated?
Yes, Immersive Translate offers extensive customization for your CNET reading experience. You can adjust translation font size, color, and spacing to match your reading preferences. Choose between bilingual mode (original + translation), translation-only mode (replaces source text), or mouse hover mode (translate on demand). You can also set up keyboard shortcuts to toggle translation on and off instantly while reading CNET articles. If certain sections don't need translation—like code snippets in how-to articles or product model numbers—you can use the smart content recognition to skip those areas. Additionally, you can add CNET to a whitelist for automatic translation every time you visit, or set specific translation rules just for CNET (like always using DeepL for this site). The input box translation feature even works in CNET's comment sections, letting you write comments in your language and auto-translate them to English before posting.

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