Skip to main content

Google Rolls Out “Real-Time Search” and “Google Goggles” App

google-goggles

Google wins again for coming up with another cool and inventive search tool—what else is new? Today Google announced at its “Searchology” event it launched its new “search options” on its main search page. This news turned out to be Google’s Real-Time Search, a new search feature that gives you the very latest and more specific results for your searches. When you click “Search Options,” you can filter your search with more specific results like by time, related searches, a “wonder wheel” view, or a timeline view.

This new Google search feature is not a replacement, it will be embedded as a part of the Google’s main page search window—a scrolling feed will constantly update and inform you of the newest results on that search, and it also lets you backtrack to see what you’ve missed. Google’s Real-Time Search feature went live today, but it may not be in full effect, as Google says it may take a few days to fully roll out its functions.You can try out this new search option for yourself at Google Trends page just by clicking on one of the “Hot Topics” or entering your own search in the field below them to get real-time results.

Recommended Videos

Another Google tool launched today was “Google Goggles,” a visual search option available as an application for Google Android phones. Google Goggle’s can recognize certain landmarks, famous attractions and paintings, and even company logos all with the click of a button. Simply snap a photo with your smartphone’s camera and Google compares elements of that picture against its database of images, matches it up and provides you with a relevant results lists of Web sites and news stories.

“Sometimes a picture really is worth a thousand words,” said Shailesh Nalawadi, product manager for Google Goggles. “For many search queries, using an image to search is easier and more useful than text alone, especially on a mobile phone. Computer vision technology is still in its infancy, but Goggles demonstrates its potential. We are hard at work extending our recognition capabilities. You can imagine a future where visual searching is as natural as pointing your finger.”

Check out these videos that demo and explain Google’s two new features.

Dena Cassella
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Haole built. O'ahu grown
Check your inbox — Microsoft just sent out the first wave of ChatGPT Bing invites
Bing copilot AI chat interface.

Microsoft's revamped ChatGPT-powered Bing search engine is here, and the first wave of invites is already out. After previewing the new search engine last week, Microsoft set up a waitlist for the first wave of ChatGPT Bing testers. If you signed up, check your email to see if Microsoft has granted you access.

According to Microsoft, more than 1 million people signed up to get an early preview of the ChatGPT-powered Bing, and for good reason. When we tested the new search engine at Microsoft's headquarters, it proved itself extremely useful immediately (despite a few rough edges).

Read more
Oops — Google Bard AI demo is disproven by the first search result
A Google blog post discussing its LaMBDA artificial intelligence technology displayed on a smartphone screen.

These are heady days if you’re following the world of artificial intelligence (AI). ChatGPT is taking over the world, Microsoft is adding its tech to Bing, and Google is working on its own AI called Bard.

Except, Bard might not quite be ready for prime time -- and Google just proved it during its own tech demonstration. Oops.

Read more
How ChatGPT could help Microsoft dethrone Google Search
A person on the Google home page while using a MacBook Pro laptop on a desk.

Microsoft is attempting to dethrone Google as the search champion by integrating ChatGPT into its Bing search engine. That’s according to a new report from The Information -- but will the gamble pay off?

ChatGPT only launched in November 2022, but it’s already been making waves among artificial intelligence researchers and the general public alike due to the unerring realism of its output. Chuck in any prompt you can think of and you’ll get back something that keenly resembles human-generated text, and people have been using it to write articles, generate code, and compose musical scores.

Read more