Google is working on PlaNet - a neural network for guessing where pictures were taken

Wondering where a fabulous picture on the internet was taken at - we've all been there. Guessing the location is quite hard if the image is not geotagged.
It seemed someone at Google had this problem, too, so the company decided to take the image search to the next level.
Google built a neural network called PlaNet, loaded with more than 90 million location-tagged images. When you search for the location of a picture - PlaNet scans it at pixel-level matches its contents to the already existing database.
The first batch of trials proved promising - PlaNet guessed the country with a 28.4% success rate and the continent - with a 48% success rate. PlaNet was also able to recognize 3.6% of times images at street level accuracy, and 10% at city-level.
Sure, those numbers hardly sound impressive, but they, in fact, do when you consider this is just the beginning.
Hopefully, we'll see PlaNet up and working sooner rather than later. The service supposedly takes 377MB of memory, which means it can easily work even off a smartphone.
Source | Via

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Microsoft releases Hub Keyboard for Android

Galaxy A9 Pro international variant is now Bluetooth certified

iPhone SE teardown shows hardware ranging from iPhone 5 to 6s

12.2-inch version of the Lenovo Yoga Book with Android shows up at Amazon priced at just $299.99

HTC One (M8) for Windows now available on Amazon for $50