When I used to be in Seattle recently,
Cheap Office Professional Plus 2010, I was struck by a conversation among a counter patron and bar tender who had been swapping stories about their latest preferred technologies. Their mutual favorite was Google Goggles, a useful piece of technology that helps you to consider photos out of your telephone;s camera and rely on them to search the Internet.Google isn;t the one corporation which will do that. Microsoft can,
Cheap Windows 7 Starter, too — though only on the iPhone and iPod Touch at this time. The “Bing for iPhone app camera scanning feature” is a lot like Google Goggles, in fact. Get a quick snap shot of a wine label and you can use it to lookup for more about the wine, winery. Shoot a book cover and Bing it to get reviews, more information on the author, and more. You get the idea….I asked the Softies how and if the Bing for iPhone app digital camera scanning feature is different from Goggles (beyond the fact that it doesn;t have a memorable and clever name). “Google Goggles does have this feature, but Bing uses video-mode barcode scanning,
Buy Office Standard 2010, which is faster than the scanning that Google Goggles uses,” a spokesperson replied.(Currently the Bing for iPhone app digital camera scanning feature doesn;t make use of Microsoft Tag barcoding, but maybe someday…)Also on the “maybe someday” checklist is availability of this Bing search feature on other platforms. I asked whether Microsoft had any plans to introduce it for Android phones and/or Windows Telephone 7 devices. The answer,
Cheap Windows 7 Home Basic, from the aforementioned spokesperson:“In regard to Android, the Bing for Android app is currently still under development, and will announce its features when we launch the app in the coming months. For Windows Telephone 7, Bing will offer an integrated search experience on devices, but we have nothing further to share.”Microsoft;s Bing for iPhone app,
Windows 7 Sale, introduced in December 2009, has earned some appreciation from a number of pundits and users, as well as some criticism from those dwindling Windows Mobile phone users who are feeling left behind.