With Immersive View, you can see what a place will look like at different times of day, what the weather will be like, and how crowded it will be. This is done using NeRF (neural radiance fields) neural network developed by Google.
The feature is currently available to a small number of users on the Google Maps mobile app.
Diagnosis of skin diseases
Google Lens now has the ability to identify skin, lip, nail, and peru number data hair diseases. Although Google representatives emphasize that the service is not intended for medical diagnosis, each year the search engine counts more than 10 billion queries related to skin diseases.
In 2021, Google launched an AI-powered dermatology app that has been clinically tested and cleared by European Union regulators. Now, you can use Google Lens to take photos of unexplained rashes and see what skin conditions they resemble.
Travel planning with artificial intelligence
In May, Google opened up access to Search Generative Experience (SGE), a search engine with built-in artificial intelligence developed by its Search Labs division.
Now, as part of SGE, the company has introduced new capabilities for travel-related queries. Users will be able to ask more detailed questions about places and destinations — and get full answers, like from chatbots, rather than just links to other sources.
The feature is available to those who have joined the Search Lads waiting list (only available to a limited number of people in the US).