Google's computer vision technology is inherent eroticismnow so good it's able to find specific objects within a video or group of videos.
During the company's Cloud Next event in San Francisco Wednesday, Google unveiled its new Cloud Video Intelligence API. The tool, which is currently available to developers in a closed beta, analyzes videos to make their contents searchable.
SEE ALSO: Microsoft CEO says artificial intelligence is the 'ultimate breakthrough'With the tool, you can search one or more videos using keywords and get back a list of results showing you where in the video you can find the objects relevant to your search terms. You can see a bit of Google's demo of the software onstage at Cloud Next in the video below.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Google says the Video Intelligence API allows developers to take advantage of Google video search capabilities even if they don't have a background in machine learning or computer vision. "This API is for large media organizations and consumer technology companies, who want to build their media catalogs or find easy ways to manage crowd-sourced content," Google's Chief Scientist Fei-Fei Li wrote in a blog post.
Though the Video Intelligence API is limited to those who are part of the beta for now, the tool could have far-reaching implications. If Google were to bring it to YouTube, for example, the contents of the platform's 1 billion+ videos would become searchable, opening up far more possibilities in terms of discovery. Just imagine! Or, rather, just search for them.
Topics Artificial Intelligence Google
CNN sent its Supreme Court sketch artist to the off'Ghost of Tsushima' got me to watch streamers. I finally get the hype.'The Office' will stream on Peacock with exclusive new contentLucid's driver assistance system will watch you more than Tesla's AutopilotElon Musk just made a bad Twitter joke, and we are so confusedSomeone painted Mark Zuckerberg's face on their nails and he's into itThe Queen reported to police for not wearing seat belt7 of the most hardWilford Brimley, beloved acting fave and star of 'Cocoon,' is dead at 85Washington caught an Asian giant hornet (aka 'murder hornet')Taylor Swift meme honors all the last great American dynastiesWilford Brimley, beloved acting fave and star of 'Cocoon,' is dead at 85Kayak's emoji search function brings the speed and fun of texting to travelNASA's Mars Perseverance rover will record sound with a microphoneElon Musk just made a bad Twitter joke, and we are so confusedTwitter Moment shows exactly how devastating the GOP healthcare bill would be for one familyFacebook CEO corrects confused congressman over Trump Jr. Twitter banElon Musk just made a bad Twitter joke, and we are so confusedHere's how much each Big Tech CEO spoke at the House antitrust hearingOops: Etsy decimal point error massively overcharges for shipping Incident / Resurrection The Morning News Roundup for August 5, 2014 Swinging for the Fences Cory Arcangel’s Working on My Novel I Remember Georges Perec Colonized on Every Level: An Interview with Dodie Bellamy by Christopher Higgs Reader’s Guilt; Toadstools by Lorin Stein The Morning News Roundup for August 11, 2014 The Morning Roundup for August 12, 2014 Where Are Don DeLillo and Emily Dickinson Now? Unpleasant Vibrators Need Not Apply Boule de Suif Sartre and Borges on Welles by Dan Piepenbring The Art of Marbling Its Light Was Prodigious by Dan Piepenbring Paranormal Activity If You See Something The Morning News Roundup for August 4, 2014 The Lean, Mean, Star David Lynch, Hiding in Plain Sight
2.6239s , 10170.9296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【inherent eroticism】,Unobstructed Information Network