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Google can help find your pet’s doppelganger in works of art — and we tried it

Google can help find your pet'southward doppelganger in works of fine art — and we tried information technology

Examples from Google Arts and Culture Pet Portraits mode
(Image credit: Google)

3 years ago, Google updated its Arts and Civilisation app to allow people to search for their lookalike hidden in paintings around the globe. Having mastered that, the company is now replacing skin for scales, fur and feathers and letting pet owners find their animals in the world of art.

"When yous take a photo in Pet Portraits, our trained computer vision algorithm recognizes where your pet is, crops the paradigm and puts them where they belong: front and center," explains Michelle Luo, product manager of Google Arts and Civilisation, in a postal service on The Keyword blog.

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"Once that is done, a machine learning algorithm matches your pet's photo with over tens of thousands of artworks from our partners' outstanding collections to find the ones that look about similar."

To get in on the activeness, simply download the app for either Android or iOS, and and then tap the rainbow camera push button at the bottom of the screen. Y'all can then either upload an image from your camera gyre, or snap your pet in real fourth dimension.

While the 2018 selfie update required me to use a VPN to gain access when information technology launched in 2018, the pet update was available immediately. And with three feline co-workers sharing my domicile office space, I figured it was about time they earned their keep and contributed to my freelance writing career by posing for a few shots.

Examples from Google Arts and Culture Pet Portraits mode

(Epitome credit: Alan Martin)

Here's Brando, a big, hard-to-snap fluffball who nonetheless is a 94% lucifer for 'The Honey Potion', which tin patently be viewed in the De Morgan Collection. He'd probably believe himself to take more in common with Lots of Luck, given he's as well from London, mind.

Examples from Google Arts and Culture Pet Portraits mode

(Epitome credit: Alan Martin)

Next up is Hamilton who, as you can probably tell from the photo, would not be amused if he had to wear the ruby ribbon showcased on 'The Pet' at the National Academy of Design. He'd besides be equally insulted to exist equated to the hanging coil on display at The Metropolitan Museum of Fine art, so I'll probably keep that 1 to myself.

Examples from Google Arts and Culture Pet Portraits mode

(Epitome credit: Alan Martin)

Terminal, just not least, is Ripley, and Google has excelled itself on this ane. Yes, there'south more dark fur on the confront, but I've definitely seen her pull both of those expressions before.

Round of ap-paws for Google, then. Yous can find more examples by exploring the #PetPortraits hashtag on both Instagram and Twitter, although it's pretty obvious Google should have picked a less popular hashtag...

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Freelance correspondent Alan has been writing about tech for over a decade, covering phones, drones and everything in between. Previously Deputy Editor of tech site Alphr, his words are found all over the spider web and in the occasional magazine as well. When non weighing upward the pros and cons of the latest smartwatch, you'll probably notice him tackling his ever-growing games backlog. Or, more likely, playing Spelunky for the millionth fourth dimension.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/google-can-help-find-your-pets-doppelganger-in-works-of-art-and-we-tried-it

Posted by: durhamsuffigh.blogspot.com

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