Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Two New Google Tools

Google Labs has just introduced two new tools that many educators may find useful, Similar Images in Google Image Search and Google News Timeline.

Similar Images
Google Image Search is a tool you can use to find just about any kind of image, but it can sometimes be difficult to find the perfect image if you can't describe it in just the right words. Similar Images allows you to refine your image search with visual similarity, searching for images using pictures rather than words. By clicking the "Similar images" link under an image you will find other images that look like it.

Using visual similarity, you don't have to refine the text of your search, instead, you can just click on the link below an image you like. For example, if you search for [jaguar], you can use the "Similar images" link to quickly narrow your search.

You might try exploring the pyramids of Egypt or discovering the Forbidden City. So if you see an image you like, but you're not sure how to describe it, just click the "Similar images" link to see more like it.

Want to know more? Check out this video tour.



Timeline
Google News Timeline organizes information chronologically by presenting results from Google News and other data sources on a zoomable, graphical timeline. You can move through time by simply dragging the timeline. You can set the time scale to days, weeks, months, years, or decades, or just include a time period in your query (i.e., "1977"). To see this in action, check out the results viewed by month in the summer of 2006.Google News Timeline can show results from many different sources, including both recent and archival news, scanned newspapers and magazines, blog posts, and sports scores and media like music and movies. You can view multiple sources simultaneously, allowing each source to lend context to the others.


Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

No comments:

NOTICE TO SPAM COMMENTERS
All comments to this blog are reviewed before being published. The chances of you getting a comment including ridiculously obvious "hidden" hyperlinks to porn sites or other spam published is virtually zero. So, save your time as well as mine, and take your tawdry business elsewhere.