You can now get an AI translator for your pet – yes, really

A new gadget called Pettichat claims it can translate what your pet is trying to say — in real time.

The AI-powered wearable has launched on Kickstarter and promises to turn barks and meows into human language in under a second.

Designed for cats and dogs, Pettichat clips onto a pet’s collar and automatically detects vocalisations like barking, whining, growling or meowing. The device then analyses the sound using its AI model. It plays back a translated message through the companion app.

As an added feature, owners can also “reply”, with the system converting spoken commands into species-appropriate sound patterns that pets can understand.

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The idea is to replace the guesswork many owners rely on when trying to interpret their animals’ behaviour. According to the company, Pettichat’s AI was trained on more than one million samples of pet vocalisations and behaviours. This has allowed it to recognise patterns linked to emotions such as excitement, hunger or anxiety.

In laboratory testing, Pettichat reportedly achieves 94.6% translation accuracy, with the device activating in around 40 milliseconds once a sound is detected. The system also improves over time using adaptive learning. As a result, it builds a communication profile based on a pet’s unique vocal patterns and behaviour.

Beyond translation, the gadget doubles as a pet tracker. Built-in GPS allows owners to monitor their pet’s location and set geofencing alerts if they wander outside a safe zone. Positioning accuracy is said to be within roughly five metres (16ft).

The hardware itself is designed to handle everyday pet life. Pettichat weighs 27g, uses bite-resistant ABS materials, and carries an IP65 water resistance rating for rain or muddy adventures. Additionally, a single charge supports up to 1,000 translations and more than 100 hours of active tracking. A full recharge takes about an hour via magnetic charging.

Privacy is another focus. Pettichat uses on-device wake detection and doesn’t continuously record audio or include a camera, only sending data to the cloud when a pet vocalisation is detected.

The device works alongside the Pettichat mobile app, where owners can review translated interactions, save them in a conversation diary, and track their pet’s activity. The platform currently supports English, Spanish, Chinese and French. It is available in pink, silver and brown.

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Whether it truly cracks the code of pet communication remains to be seen, but Pettichat’s creators say the goal is simple: helping owners better understand the animals they live with every day.

The post You can now get an AI translator for your pet – yes, really appeared first on Trusted Reviews.

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