That's impressive!

So Google has BOUGHT some doctoral types, or highly specialized geeks,

And is looking at X number of images.

I bet the number of images on his video film library is at least several orders 
of magnitude above what Like deals with.

Dennis Gearon

Signature Warning
----------------
EARTH has a Right To Life,
  otherwise we all die.

Read 'Hot, Flat, and Crowded'
Laugh at http://www.yert.com/film.php


--- On Wed, 9/15/10, Shashi Kant <sk...@sloan.mit.edu> wrote:

> From: Shashi Kant <sk...@sloan.mit.edu>
> Subject: Re: Color search for images
> To: solr-user@lucene.apache.org
> Date: Wednesday, September 15, 2010, 8:56 PM
> > I'm sure there's some post
> doctoral types who could get a graphic shape analyzer, color
> analyzer, to at least say it's a flower.
> >
> > However, even Google would have to build new
> datacenters to have the horsepower to do that kind of
> graphic processing.
> >
> 
> Not necessarily true. Like.com - which incidentally got
> acquired by
> Google recently - built a true visual search technology and
> applied it
> on a large scale.
> 

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