Google Visual Search Coming Soon to Android
Several sources have shared the news that "Google Goggles," publicly known as Google Visual Search, will be "coming soon" to an Android phone near you. Rather than typing in the search term, you will be able to just take a picture with your phone and search results will be returned. The new search was recently featured on CNBC's "Inside the Mind of Google." Unfortunately Goggles didn't pass muster with a recent focus group, so it could be a while before Google decides this is ready to hit the streets.
The possibilities here are so boundless that it simply boggles the mind.
This ain't rocket surgery.
Image searching combined with the fantastically bad cameras on all smart phones. Sounds like a good idea in theory, but not so great in practice. For now.
I'm sure they'll have plenty of time to work out the kinks during Beta.
So, the Goggles... they do nothing?
One man's -1 Troll is another's +5 funny/insightful.
My first thought was this TED video: http://blog.ted.com/2009/03/sixth_sense_demo.php. It would be interesting to have a heavyweight like Google developing tools to bring such a product to consumers.
My webcomic
What are the odds that the service doesn't use the image at all, but just uses the phone's GPS sensor, compass, and orientation sensor to work out what object you're looking at?
-- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
I wonder why folks at Android (read Google) do not focus on web functionalities that matter in today's age.
Heck, we need Flash and PDF capabilities by default. Yes...by default. I know there are apps for these but "default" is the key word here. Now what's wrong with that?
Secondly how come Google's own Google Maps works better on the iPhone than Android phones? It should be the other way round...after all it's their product.
Come on Google do something.
A lot of people are being pretty pessimistic regarding how accurate the results will be.
You are being incredibly optimistic.
Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
On my next date, she whips out her cell phone camera, snaps a quick shot, shoots it off to Google, and gets results on me.
"Honey, that chicken is a filthy liar! She so wanted it at the time!"
http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
First you need a naked woman to see more naked woman.
And if you take a picture of your cock, you will get pictures of more cocks.
This is the First step. Next as soon as we see an item, our brain will be bombarded with price list from different web stores and we will know where to buy it cheap. Think of a Java code, it will be in your brain along with some not so disruptive ads.
Thanks it is Google who are working on it. If it were MS, Ballmer would have squirted a lot more than necessary.
from the my-donut-shop-returned-goatse dept.
If they are watching you I would purposefully look at things like this.
The Amazon app for Android offers the ability to search for an item by either barcode or photo. According to the Amazon blurb, there are real people behind the requests that actually look for the items pictured and send results. I have used it twice and both times they found what I needed, but the results took about 10-15 minutes to get to me. I wonder if Google will just have 10,000 wage slaves working the results queue?
I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
Google Goggles is available for install from the Android Market place right now.
It works great for logos, and can even OCR business cards. Though, it seems to be a tad crashy on the Droid.
If you don’t know what a horse is, then yeah, it’s easier to take its picture than type it in.
Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
It's not coming soon, it's already there. I downloaded and installed the app, it's an OCR that can also read logos and barcodes. If you take a photo of a product with text, logos or barcodes it will know what that product is.
I took a photo of a tape dispenser with nothing but the table in background, it wasn't able to figure out it is a photo of a tape dispenser, it gave me a list of similar photos which had nothing at all to do with tape dispenser, there was even a photo of a swan.
I took a photo of a memory stick, it wasn't able to figure out what this is. Once again I got the "similar pictures" one of them was a photo of bees, nothing even close to memory stick.
I took a photo of the hand sanitizer, it recognized the Purell logo and read the text on the bottle. Taking a photo of the back of the bottle didn't result in any meaningful matches. Taking a photo of the bar code identified the product, but that's something I can already do with the barcode reader application.
It can read QR barcodes too. Nothing special, the barcode reader app already does that.
One man's -1 Troll is another's +5 funny/insightful.
Funny divided by insightful equals negative troll. :)
Bow-ties are cool.
If you don’t know what a horse is, then yeah, it’s easier to take its picture than type it in.
But if you want someone to believe it's a horse, then you need an electric monk...
Bow-ties are cool.
Well, funny/insightful doesn't really mean anything itself, but the limit of moderation as rating approaches funny/insightful = Troll.
Sewage Treatment Facilities - "Our duty is clear."
Here. You can test it right now:
http://betalabs.nokia.com/betas/view/nokia-point-and-find
It’s sad, how often Slashdot is full of hype about Google or Apple doing things, that others did for a loong time. :/
Must be sad to live the 3rd world of the mobile phone industry.
It’s really hard not to do a “shameless plug” for Nokia phones yet again...
Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
I have this software running on my phone, and it does work.
What stuns me is that while this thing is in 'beta' and returning poor search results, they have the opportunity to 'train up' the AI, while also keeping hold of a bevy of images that they collect from a few thousand (or hundred thousand) phones that geeks like us were willing to install it on...
I bet that the corpus of images they collect during the next 4 years - the beta period - will be pretty impressive, and kind of scary. I bet that they claim rights on all of them. I guess we need to start watermarking the photos from our phonecams.
Just my thoughts...
bar codes are your friend. as are product codes and other text that may be scanned.
Inventor, Artist http://www.Rubber-Power.com
I've installed Google Goggles and gave it a test run. It works brilliantly. I haven't tried any landmarks yet, but I took a picture of a textbook sitting on my desk and it recognised it and took me to book reviews, and I could preview the book on Google Books. The picture had major glare issues and it still worked fine. Thinking it was a fluke, I took a picture of a second textbook and sure enough it worked perfectly again. 2 from 2 aint bad.
Great, now searches for "human" will return everyone with a picture on the net.
You connect the dots, you pick up the pieces.