A real-world test of Google Goggles visual search (photos)
CNET's James Martin takes a walk through downtown San Francisco to test out Google's new visual search, currently running on Android devices.
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As Google continues to build out its search technology, the company has gradually expanded beyond browser-based text search to include voice and image searches.
The experimental Google Goggles is one such project: an image-based search service that allows people to submit an image and get Web-based search results pulled from Google's massive archive of indexed photos and images. It's currently available only on Android-powered smartphones, but a Google developer is working on a side project to incorporate the same functionality into future versions of the company's Chrome Web browser.
The concept is simple enough: snap an image with your phone, and let Google Goggles search the Web for results based on the image you've submitted. But it's not always easy to execute.
I put Google Goggles to the test on my Motorola Droid running Android 2.0.1. Logos and text seem to be the simplest tasks for Goggles to handle. It had no problem identifying an older version of the CNET logo, returning results with an image of the logo as well as our Web site, cnet.com. Other tests didn't go quite as well.
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Augmented reality
Outside of CNET's office in downtown San Francisco, I tried out the live view augmented reality features of Google Goggles, which are intended to overlay information on shops and restaurants in front of you based on the GPS location of the device. You don't need to take a picture to use this feature, instead simply use the live camera view through Goggles.
With my Droid's GPS turned on, Goggles failed to give very accurate results nearby. Standing outside Tara, a Thai restaurant on Second Street in San Francisco, Goggles was unable to identify my location and instead returned results for restaurants a block or two away.
Snap an image
5D Mk II
In its oddest display of information during my walk, I snapped an image of my Canon 5D Mark II on the ground to see if it would return accurate search results for the camera.
Instead, Goggles returned to me results for Van Huesen Factory Store, which was located across the street from my location.
Landmarks
Ferry Building
Product search
Product search is another use for Goggles, and in my tests it worked very well. There are many mobile applications that allow you to scan a bar code for results, but Google Goggles simply needs an image of the product, like this bottle of wine from the Napa Valley in California.
Goggles accurately returned an image result for the wine bottle label, as well as a link to a review of the specific 2006 merlot.
Books
Sriracha
Street art
Canon
Lens
The 24-70mm 2.8 lens on my Canon camera contains wraparound text, so I thought it might pose a challenge to Goggles. Goggles was able to identify it successfully, returning results for similar Nikon, Olympus, and Sigma 70mm zoom lenses.
All in all, Google Goggles was not perfect, but was still impressive. Users of the Android app have the choice of enabling or disabling submission of their image search history to Google, and I would expect that the more the feature gets used, the better it will become.