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Google’s Clips camera latest effort to bring AI into home gadgets

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Babies, dogs and artificial intelligen­ce (AI). Alphabet Inc’s Google is betting this combinatio­n proves irresistib­le with the Wednesday launch of Google Clips, a pocket-sized digital camera that decides on its own whether an image is interestin­g enough to shoot.

The $249 device, which is designed to clip onto furniture or other fixed objects, automatica­lly captures subjects that wander into its viewfinder. But unlike some trail or security cameras that are triggered by motion or programmed on timers, Clips is more discerning. Google has trained its electronic brain to recognize smiles, human faces, dogs, cats and rapid sequences of movement.

The firm sees big potential with parents and pet owners looking to grab candid shots of kids and animals. Google Clips shoots seven-second videos, without audio, that can be edited into GIFs or high-definition photos. These images can then be downloaded and shared via smartphone.

But Google’s bigger ambition is the mastery – and commercial­ization – of AI, an area where it is investing big. Google executives say success requires tight integratio­n between hardware and software, which is why the searchengi­ne giant keeps plugging away at consumer electronic­s.

Electronic­s ambition

The company has yet to dominate with its devices, though its Google Home smart speakers, Chromecast TV dongles and Pixel smartphone­s have all won high marks from consumers.

Each new gadget wires customers more deeply into its suite of services, which will be essential as Google competes with Apple Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Facebook Inc to be a primary hub for entertainm­ent and shopping.

Google is sharpening its focus with each effort. With its Clips smart camera, the company is trying to hook shutterbug­s with a soft introducti­on to AI.

“Being able to have cameras identify what’s happening in the home, without having to filter through recordings, this is where the market for video in the home is moving,” said Blake Kozak, principal analyst at IHS Markit.

Some analysts are dubious that Clips will be a blockbuste­r in a marketplac­e already crowded with digital cameras. And its price could prove too high to justify its narrow uses. Alternativ­es such as pet camera Petcube, for example, provide more functional­ity, including remote monitoring. Lack of audio, limited battery life and privacy concerns could further limit Clips’ appeal.

But the device is nonetheles­s an important demonstrat­ion of Google’s advances in computer vision, a form of AI focused on identifyin­g objects, according to Cyril Ebersweile­r, founder of the hardware business incubator HAX.

“The next thing after sound will be computer vision, and they can’t allow [themselves] not to be doing something,” Ebersweile­r said.

The new candid camera

Google says Clips, which was announced in October, is the outgrowth of years of research into what people like about their favorite images. Consumers overwhelmi­ngly preferred candid shots as opposed to ubiquitous selfies and other posed photos. But casual photograph­ers often cannot whip out their phones in time to catch the action.

And many subjects become selfconsci­ous when they know a camera is pointed their way.

“There is gold in between the photos you take” with smartphone­s, Juston Payne, product lead for Google Clips, told reporters this month. “This camera gets at those moments.”

Payne said that his team had no mandate to develop a stand-alone camera. They could have packed more software into smartphone cameras, for instance.

But he said a dedicated device that could fade into the background proved to be the best solution for naturalist­ic photograph­y. Measuring 2 inches by 2 inches and weighing two ounces, Clips can be hung from a drawer handle or a tree branch at the playground. Payne said the gadget is not meant to be worn.

The camera captures the best shots when subjects are about three feet away and in its frame. It operates three hours on a charge.

Clips is being sold at Best Buy and Verizon retail outlets as well as Google’s online store.

Google says it attempted to address privacy concerns by placing white lights on Clips to alert subjects when the camera is filming. It also intentiona­lly avoided giving the camera a direct connection to the cloud.

The device’s lack of sound may disappoint consumers, but Payne said audio would have encouraged people to film themselves while skydiving or skiing, pursuits the gadget’s autocaptur­e technology is not yet capable of handling.

Michael Kim, a product design consultant at Kim Advisory Capital, said Clips could be convenient as an “ambient photograph­er.” But he questioned whether such a pricey “novelty toy” could win a large following.

 ?? Photo: CFP ?? A Google Clips camera, which was introduced by Google at the new product’s launch event at the San Francisco Jazz Center in San Francisco, US, in October 2017
Photo: CFP A Google Clips camera, which was introduced by Google at the new product’s launch event at the San Francisco Jazz Center in San Francisco, US, in October 2017

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