Jump to content

Google Image Swirl: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
made note that website nolonger exists
No edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
}}
}}


'''Google Image Swirl''',<ref>[http://image-swirl.googlelabs.com/ Google Image Swirl]</ref> launched on November 17, 2009, is a visualization tool that organizes image search results into a hierarchy of groups and sub-groups based on visual and semantic similarity. It is suggested that such interface and grouping can help resolve queries that can have multiple types of results, are ambiguous, such as Apple, Jaguar, etc., and explore images associated with various viewpoints. This feature is available for 200,000 queries.<ref>[http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/11/explore-images-with-google-image-swirl.html Blogspot.com]</ref>
'''Google Image Swirl''',<ref>[http://image-swirl.googlelabs.com/ Google Image Swirl]</ref> launched on November 17, 2009, was a visualization tool that organized image search results into a hierarchy of groups and sub-groups based on visual and semantic similarity. It is suggested that such interface and grouping can help resolve queries that can have multiple types of results, are ambiguous, such as Apple, Jaguar, etc., and explore images associated with various viewpoints. This feature is no longer available.<ref>[http://philbradley.typepad.com/phil_bradleys_weblog/2011/08/google-image-swirl-is-closing.html Typepad.com]</ref>


==Bing concurrence==
==Bing concurrence==

Revision as of 17:08, 29 November 2011

Google Image Swirl
Type of site
Image Search
OwnerGoogle
Created byGoogle
URLhttp://image-swirl.googlelabs.com/ - no longer works

Google Image Swirl,[1] launched on November 17, 2009, was a visualization tool that organized image search results into a hierarchy of groups and sub-groups based on visual and semantic similarity. It is suggested that such interface and grouping can help resolve queries that can have multiple types of results, are ambiguous, such as Apple, Jaguar, etc., and explore images associated with various viewpoints. This feature is no longer available.[2]

Bing concurrence

In September, 2009, a few weeks before Google Image Swirl appeared, Microsoft announced Bing Visual Search Beta. However, to explore pictures with Bing, you must use the Internet Explorer browser and you need to install Silverlight. Therefore, Bing Visual Search is available only in English.

Technical details

According to Google researchers Yushi Jing and Henry Rowley,[3] and product manager Aparna Chennapragada,[4] Google Image Swirl leverages both the text information and the "visual" features associated with the Web images (such as those developed for Google Similar Images) to determine how images should be grouped together.

References

External links