• Categories

    • Automotive Gadgets
    • Cool Gadgets
    • Electronic Gadgets
    • Funny & Gag Gadgets
    • Concepts
    • Gadget Toys
    • Gadget News
    • Digital Cameras
    • Cell Phones
  • Latest Posts

      First Sony Ericsson TD-SCDMA Phone A8i for China Mobile
      Sony Ericsson Vivaz
      Finis Swimsense watch tells you about your swimming
      Hotmail Now Pushes Mail to Your Phone
      Dell Aero
      Gadget Thumbnails for 30-Aug-2010
      Sony Ericsson UK Tweets Xperia X10 Family Will Be Receiving Android 2.1 Upgrade By The End Of September
      Ithaca College Tots program uses Wii Balance Board
      Intuit GoPayment and Mophie Marketplace Combination Enable iPhone Credit Card Processing
      ZTE Salute
  • Friends

    • Cell Database
    • Cell Phone News and Reviews
    • Cell Phones

Search:

Google Adds Facial Recognition to Image Search

CATEGORY: Gadget News | SOURCE:

It looks like Google’s 2006 acquisition of Neven Vision, a company specializing in facial recognition software, is finally starting to pay off. Google Blogoscoped, a blog dedicated to everything related to Google, got a tip from a Google engineer that Google had secretly added some facial recognition abilities to its image search this week.

The feature remains unofficial and unannounced, but you can add a small query string to the end of your Google Image search URL to see the facial recognition software in action.

For example, do a normal Google image search for “Starbuck Battlestar” and your image results should produce images from the American SciFi TV show Battlestar Galactica. Then try adding “&imgtype=face” to the end of the URL. Your new search results will only contain photos of people and tight shots of their faces. Cool right?


Last August, Google Picasa product manager Adrian Graham had this to say about Google’s acquisition of Neven Vision in the official Google blog:

“Neven Vision comes to Google with deep technology and expertise around automatically extracting information from a photo. It could be as simple as detecting whether or not a photo contains a person, or, one day, as complex as recognizing people, places, and objects.”

BeSocial: flickr | digg story | methodshop

Related Posts:

  • Google Blog Search
  • Windows Live Search
  • Google Universal Search
  • Google base comes out of hiding
  • Guess the Google


Comments:



No Comments

No comments yet.

Comments RSS TrackBack Identifier URI

Leave a comment

Apple TV Announcements TV Phone V10 brings portable TV to life