Ish Video me Mene aapko Google Photos Ke New Feature Google Lens Ka Preview Test Kiya hai. Umeed hai Aapko Video Pasand aayegi. Like, Share & Subscribe. Cool Thing: We don't Monetize. In this video I have explained Google Lens in Hindi with the help of Google Photos And Google Assistant. And if you don't know more about Google Assistant, please leave comments below that.
Earlier this month Google made Google Lens available for non-Pixel Android devices, and this week it’s finally started rolling the feature out to iOS devices like your iPhone and iPad as well.
Google Lens is an on-demand photo recognition tool built into Google Photos that can provide additional information about what you’re taking a picture of.
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How to Get Started on Google Lens
Android: Get excited, Android-fans-who-don’t-own-Pixels. It’s been almost 10 years since Google…
Read more ReadFor instance, snapping a shot of San Francisco’s Coit Tower will bring up reviews and contact information for the landmark. Snapping a shot of a business card will interpret the information it sees and gives you the option to add it to your phone, the same for event invitations that can be automatically added to your calendar from a picture.
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The feature debuted last year on the Google Pixel.
To get it on your iPhone you need to first download the latest version of the app (you need version 3.15 for this one). From there, you’ll launch the app and select a photo. With the photo loaded, you’ll want to tap the Google Lens button below it. It’s the square that kind of looks like the Instagram logo.
Once it recognizes what’s in the photo it will give you whatever additional information it might have on your photo’s subject. It doesn’t work for everything, but when it does work it’s pretty awesome.
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In January, Google integrated the “Word Lens” feature into the Google Translate mobile app with support for 7 languages. “Word Lens” translates large printed text when you place the camera in front of it, including street signs and consumer goods labels. “Word Lens” is activated by opening the Google Translate app, tapping on the camera icon and holding your device in front of the text. The text transforms live on your screen into the language that you want to translate without requiring an Internet connection. Now the “Word Lens” feature in the Google Translate app supports 20 more languages, bringing it to a total of 27.
The twenty-seven languages that "Word Lens" in Google Translate supports now are: English, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Hindi (one-way translation), Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai (one-way translation), Turkish and Ukrainian. You can also take pictures of the text and have it translated across a total of 37 languages. Some of the "Word Lens" languages may require you to download a translation package file, which has a size of about 2-3 megabytes. Below is a video demo of how "Word Lens" works:
Google also improved the conversation mode in the Google Translate app update. This will be especially beneficial to users in emerging markets that rely on slower mobile networks. The conversation mode of the app is a speech translation feature that works across 32 languages. For example, you can speak Spanish to the app and have it display what you said in English. When I was visiting Europe in the spring, I was able to communicate with some of the taxi drivers there using the conversation mode built into Google Translate.
How does Google Translate make so many languages available offline? Otavio Good, a software engineer at Google, said in a blog post that his team had to develop a very small neural net and put limits on how it was taught. “We want to be able to recognize a letter with a small amount of rotation, but not too much. If we overdo the rotation, the neural network will use too much of its information density on unimportant things,” said Good. “So we put effort into making tools that would give us a fast iteration time and good visualizations. Inside of a few minutes, we can change the algorithms for generating training data, generate it, retrain, and visualize.”
As of January 2015, Google Translate was used by over 500 million people per month and more than 1 billion translations were made per day. Google crowdsources improvements for the Translate app through its Translate Community, which validates and corrects translations. The newly added languages on "Word Lens" will be fully rolled out on the Google Translate Android and iOS app over the next few days.
What are your thoughts about the Google Translate app? Do you use the "Word Lens" feature often? Please leave a comment!
'>In January, Google integrated the “Word Lens” feature into the Google Translate mobile app with support for 7 languages. “Word Lens” translates large printed text when you place the camera in front of it, including street signs and consumer goods labels. “Word Lens” is activated by opening the Google Translate app, tapping on the camera icon and holding your device in front of the text. The text transforms live on your screen into the language that you want to translate without requiring an Internet connection. Now the “Word Lens” feature in the Google Translate app supports 20 more languages, bringing it to a total of 27.
The twenty-seven languages that 'Word Lens' in Google Translate supports now are: English, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Hindi (one-way translation), Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai (one-way translation), Turkish and Ukrainian. You can also take pictures of the text and have it translated across a total of 37 languages. Some of the 'Word Lens' languages may require you to download a translation package file, which has a size of about 2-3 megabytes. Below is a video demo of how 'Word Lens' works:
Google also improved the conversation mode in the Google Translate app update. This will be especially beneficial to users in emerging markets that rely on slower mobile networks. The conversation mode of the app is a speech translation feature that works across 32 languages. For example, you can speak Spanish to the app and have it display what you said in English. When I was visiting Europe in the spring, I was able to communicate with some of the taxi drivers there using the conversation mode built into Google Translate.
How does Google Translate make so many languages available offline? Otavio Good, a software engineer at Google, said in a blog post that his team had to develop a very small neural net and put limits on how it was taught. “We want to be able to recognize a letter with a small amount of rotation, but not too much. If we overdo the rotation, the neural network will use too much of its information density on unimportant things,” said Good. “So we put effort into making tools that would give us a fast iteration time and good visualizations. Inside of a few minutes, we can change the algorithms for generating training data, generate it, retrain, and visualize.”
As of January 2015, Google Translate was used by over 500 million people per month and more than 1 billion translations were made per day. Google crowdsources improvements for the Translate app through its Translate Community, which validates and corrects translations. The newly added languages on 'Word Lens' will be fully rolled out on the Google Translate Android and iOS app over the next few days.
What are your thoughts about the Google Translate app? Do you use the 'Word Lens' feature often? Please leave a comment!