Have a spare $249 and TV Series Archivesa desire to never think about when you shouldbe snapping a photo? Then Google has something special for you.
Google Clips quietly went on sale via Google's website this week. The device, announced at Google's Pixel 2 event in October, is a small camera -- less than 2-by-2 inches -- that users can easily hold or clip anywhere.
But it's not just a convenient camera like Snapchat's Spectacles or, you know, the smartphone in your hand. Google Clips takes photos at particular moments based on artificial intelligence and a machine learning algorithm.
SEE ALSO: What Google Clips means for privacy and constant surveillance"Google Clips is smart enough to recognize great expressions, lighting and framing. So the camera captures beautiful, spontaneous images. And it gets smarter over time," Google's website reads.
Taking photos not with a press of a button but rather at any moment obviously brings forward some security concerns. Google product manager Juston Payne said the team behind Google Clips prioritized those issues. For example, the camera only stores photos on the device. A light shows on the device when it's able to capture photos, and they capture photos best at areas 3-8 feet in front of the lens.
"The bottom line is I don't think it crosses any new lines in terms of privacy," Jay Stanely, an ACLU policy analyst with the organization's Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, told Mashable shortly after launch.
Here are the specs:
1.9 inches in dimension
2.1 ounces
130-degree field of view
15 frames-per-second
16 GB of storage
Up to 3 hours of battery life
Compatible with Google Pixel, Samsung Galaxy S7, or Galaxy S8 running Android 7.0 Nougat or greater, or with iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X running iOS 10 or greater
Happy snapping, or rather ... happy not doing anything as you live your best life and have evidence to prove it!
Topics Artificial Intelligence Google
See You There: Paris Review at the Downtown Literary Festival Tomorrow by The Paris ReviewWhat We’re Loving: Dancing Horses, Critical Fashion by The Paris ReviewThe Private Lives of Web Journalists by Jason NovakPaula Fox, Fighting Perfection by Jonathan FranzenYouTube revives sort by oldest video button on user channelsEugenides on Moshfegh by Jeffrey EugenidesRuth Prawer Jhabvala, 1927–2013 by Thessaly La ForceHow to watch 'The Bear' Season 2: release date, streaming deals, and moreGoogle’s Year in Search was as bleak as 2020Mastercard and Visa will stop processing payments to PornhubBritish man who got one of the first COVID vaccines goes viral for being an absolute delightFilling the Silence: An Interview with Marie Chaix by Sarah GerardApple ID supports passkeys on iOS 17, iPad OS 17, and macOS Sonoma. Here's how to test it out.Mastercard and Visa will stop processing payments to PornhubGoogle Pixel 8 could have way better refresh ratesPornhub bans downloads and unverified uploads following backlash'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for June 21Alejandro Zambra, Santiago, Chile by Matteo PericoliOne Word: bookBot by Sadie SteinMaster Class by Katherine Hill Bayou Fever: Romare Bearden’s Dynamic Collages My Dogs Eat Better Than I Do, and I’m Okay with That Search Light: Jane Hammond’s “Dazzle Paintings’ Of Opium, Spying, and Secret Silk Squares Staff Picks: Fleur Jaeggy, R. Sikoryak, Brian Blanchfield, and More The Victorian Fantasy of the North Pole Was the Opposite of Ours In an Ancient Cave, It’s Pointillism: The Prequel Love the Smell of Old Books? Try the Historic Book Odor Wheel Revisited: Robert Lowell’s “Beyond the Alps” Someone Stole the World’s Largest Gold Coin—Let’s Do It Again How to: Taking Pictures of PCBs Women at Work in the First World War Kiki Smith: “Portraits, Celestial Bodies, and Fairy Tales” The Life of Paper: New Art by Austin Thomas Sky Burial: How My First Date in Forty Years Ended in Disaster Daylight Saving Hell: One Woman Vs. the Clock in Her Subaru Mike Powell: Visiting a Fissure in the Arizona Desert Searching for Derek Walcott Poolside with Chuck Berry “And I’d Do It Again”: Aimée Crocker and the Art of the Heiress
2.3802s , 10107.5078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【TV Series Archives】,Charm Information Network