Skip to main content

Google Lens is getting Chrome integration to help you find out-of-stock products

Google announced at its Search On event on Wednesday that it’s bringing the smartphone functionality of its Google Lens to the desktop version of Chrome. Lens is an app that helps identify objects, and it’s installed by default in many Android phones.

At some point in “the coming months,” Chrome will receive an update to incorporate Lens-style searching into Chrome. Instead of the old highlight, then right-click, then “search Google for” three-step process, you can search a webpage directly with Lens.

Recommended Videos

In addition to cutting out a couple of the typical steps, this also lets you search Google directly for highlighted content, such as photos or drawings. If you’ve ever tried to finesse the arcane results that you sometimes get from “search Google for image” on desktop, the new Lens functionality could theoretically do that job faster and more accurately. It should also let you search images directly from a video file, in case you really need to find out how much Lil Nas X’s outfits cost.

While this is obviously a boon for overall search engine utility on desktop, Google’s main goal appears to be e-commerce. Much of the thrust of its presentation revolved around the utility of the new Lens app as it relates to shopping. Rather than having to look around for a product name, label, or bar code, Lens should be able to bring you to an identical or a similar product’s page just from the image itself.

Google Shopping has also received two other updates, which let you pull up a list of assorted products from a generic search term on mobile, i.e. cropped jackets, an remotely check in-store inventory directly from a Google search result.

One would assume the latter service is dependent upon the cooperation of the stores in question. On the other hand, it wouldn’t be the first time we’ve found a store where Google had a better idea of what they had in the storeroom than the clerks did.

Google Lens shopping integration.
Dan Baker/Digital Trends

Google also announced at Search On that it intends to bring an A.I. model called MUM (Multitask Unified Model) to the mobile version of Google Lens. With MUM, you’ll be able to ask Google questions about whatever you’re looking at, or about photos you’ve just taken. The example Google used was having MUM find you a pair of socks that matched a shirt with a specific pattern.

So now, it appears that Google is trying to make your actual mother, and all her well-meaning fashion advice, obsolete. That’s going to be nice and awkward during the holidays.

Google Lens was launched four years ago as of this coming Monday. An evolution of the functionality built into Google Goggles, the Lens exists as both an integrated feature of Google Assistant and the camera apps, and a stand-alone app on the Google Play Store.

Thomas Hindmarch
Contributing writer
Thomas Hindmarch is a freelance writer with 20 years' experience in the gaming and technology fields. He also writes for…
Google may have just fixed Chrome’s most annoying problem
A Macbook with Google Chrome opened to a Gmail inbox.

While Google Chrome is one of the best web browsers, over the years it has gained a reputation for being something of a resource hog, gobbling up your PC’s memory like it’s going out of style. That can be a problem if you’re running other resource-heavy tasks and don’t want things to slow down. Now, Chrome has been updated with two new features that cut down on memory usage and extend your laptop’s battery life, according to Google. The changes are set to roll out today with the latest release of Chrome on desktop (version m108).The first new feature, dubbed Memory Saver, is designed to reduce the amount of memory Chrome’s tabs use. It does this by freeing up memory from inactive tabs, and putting them to sleep so they can’t monopolize your system’s resources. When you need to access the tabs again, they will be reloaded and become active. The goal of Energy Saver, meanwhile, is fairly self-explanatory -- helping your laptop battery last longer -- but it does so in a somewhat interesting way. When your battery drops to 20%, Chrome will try to prolong your battery life by “limiting background activity and visual effects for websites with animations and videos.”Presumably, this means Chrome will limit the kind of flashy effects that have made a comeback in web design in recent years. Google says that when these new features launch, users will still be able to customize them to their liking. You can disable either Memory Saver or Energy Saver (or both), and mark certain websites as exempt in Chrome’s settings. The changes could turn out to be important. While Chrome has managed to become the dominant Windows web browser and one of the best browsers for Mac, it has been plagued by poor memory management for years. If Memory Saver and Energy Saver are able to help ameliorate that -- and make your battery last longer too -- then Google might have gone some way to fixing Chrome’s biggest problem. Both Memory Saver and Energy Saver will be launched globally over the next few weeks. The features are coming to Chrome on Windows, macOS, and ChromeOS.

Read more
Half of Google Chrome extensions may be collecting your personal data
Google Chrome icon in mac dock.

Data risk management company Incogni has found that half of every installed Google Chrome extension has a high to very high risk of collecting personal data, showing a strong correlation to the number of permissions given.

After analyzing 1,237 Chrome extensions found in the Chrome Web Store, a study by Incogni has uncovered some troubling findings. Nearly half (48.7%) of the extensions were found to potentially expose users' personally identifiable information (PII), distribute malware and adware, and record passwords and financial information.

Read more
Google Chrome gets one of Microsoft Edge’s best features
Google Chrome has been updated with a new sidebar feature.

Google Chrome has announced new updates for its browser to make searching more effective without having to open a new tab or return to a previous page after inputting a new search.

The Chrome sidebar feature comes just months after Microsoft introduced a similar feature to its own browser, Edge.

Read more