mercredi 17 mai 2017
Google Lens Will Change How You Take Photos Forever
The camera on your smartphone is about to become a lot more useful, thanks to Google. The company announced at its Google I/O annual developers conference a new product called Google Lens that will make you think of your camera differently.
With Google Lens, your smartphone camera won't just see what you see, but will also understand what you see to help you take action. #io17 http://pic.twitter.com/viOmWFjqk1
- Google (@Google) May 17, 2017
At its core, Google Lens is relatively simple to understand and use. Take a photo and let Google figure out more details based on the photo. For example, if you take a photo of a restaurant, Google Lens will recognize what restaurant it is, tell you what the hours it has or what's on the menu. Or, take a photo of a WiFi router and its password, and Google Lens will ask if you'd like to connect to the WiFi. It sounds like a dream and we'll have to wait and see what it's like actually using it, but for now, it looks like a game-changer.
Google Lens BLEW ME AWAY. Such a simple concept I never knew I needed. No more reading my wifi password to friends #GoogleIO http://pic.twitter.com/NZ1fYfZvqm
- Kyle Melnick (@KlyeOnFire) May 17, 2017
Google Lens will come in two Google products: Google Assistant and Google Photos. Google Assistant is the company's answer to Siri on the iPhone. The product is coming to the iPhone around May 17 and it's pretty useful; it works like Siri in that it can answer your questions, scan your email, tell you what's upcoming on your calendar, and several other features. With Google Lens on Google Assistant, you can try numerous of the features I mentioned above. Just hold up your smartphone camera to whatever object you want more info on, and ta-da! You should see more information.
On Google Photos, Google Lens will work a little differently. Say you took a photo of a sculpture on a trip to Italy. Google Lens can retroactively tell you what sculpture it is - preventing you from forgetting a possible precious memory. The company also understands that we take photos and screenshots of everything; receipts, books we want to read, and events we don't want to forget about. So, Google Lens will theoretically come up with other prompts with these types of photos, such as suggesting reviews on photos of books or asking if you'd like to buy a ticket to a photo of an upcoming concert. Google hasn't announced yet when Google Lens will officially come to these two products, but keep an eye out and be sure to try it.
Related Posts:
WTF: A Woman Was Denied a Second Job Interview For Asking This Question On Monday, March 13, Taylor Byrnes tweeted screenshots of the response she received from SkiptheDishes after asking about pay and benefits following her first interview at the food delivery service in Winnipeg, Canada. "Appl… Read More
The 1 Easy Way to Tell When Donald Trump Is in Over His Head President Donald Trump talks. A lot. And while he always attempts to answer the questions asked of him in a public setting, that doesn't mean those bluff-laden, pass-the-buck answers actually provide any information or indic… Read More
The Opioid Epidemic's Biggest Culprit Isn't Heroin Anymore - It’s Something Deadlier Part of a series of images Jessica* created with photographer John Trew to portray the emotions associated with addiction. Photo courtesy of John Trew. Andrew*, an HVAC engineer, looks better than your average 37-year-old, c… Read More
Ivanka Trump Gets Real About the Media's "Viciousness," and the Internet Fires Back Ivanka Trump opened up in an interview on Fox and Friends about what it's been like to work in Washington since her father took office, and the internet couldn't help but roast her. One of the show's cohosts, Brian Kilmeade,… Read More
Getting Robbed at Gun Point Was Apparently a Walk in the Park For This Jimmy John's Employee Sometimes, life hands you a bad day and you need to just let it ride out. That's how one Jimmy John's employee seemingly approached a robbery at gunpoint as he stoically handed the gunman money from the register. The robbery… Read More
0 comments:
Enregistrer un commentaire