Google Photos recibió una actualización sorpresa en Google I/O 2024 La sesión principal del evento es el martes. La sesión, presidida por el director ejecutivo Sundar Pichai, abarcó varios temas clave. inteligencia artificial (AI) Anuncios, incluidas nuevas actualizaciones de mellizo 1.5 Pro, nuevas funciones de búsqueda de Google, la introducción de nuevos modelos de IA para fotos y videos, y más. Curiosamente, el gigante tecnológico también presentó Ask Photos, un nuevo chatbot inteligente impulsado por inteligencia artificial para Google Photos que facilita la búsqueda de una foto específica en la biblioteca.
Durante el evento, Pichai destacó que la compañía ahora está trabajando para crear experiencias de búsqueda más poderosas dentro de los productos de Google utilizando las capacidades de Gemini. Un ejemplo de esto es imágenes de google, que fue una de las primeras plataformas del gigante tecnológico en obtener capacidades de inteligencia artificial. Antes de las nuevas actualizaciones, las herramientas de inteligencia artificial en fotografías solo podían comprender palabras clave básicas y ciertos temas, que podían usarse para ayudar a encontrar las imágenes que buscaban los usuarios. Sin embargo, con la última herramienta de búsqueda inteligente, Ask Photos, este proceso puede resultar mucho más sencillo.
Ask AI funciona con Gemini y está optimizado como motor de búsqueda. Puede comprender indicaciones en lenguaje natural y puede leer y comprender una gran cantidad de imágenes según su tema, antecedentes e incluso información numérica en los metadatos. “Con Preguntar Fotos, puedes preguntar qué estás buscando de forma natural, como: 'Muéstrame la mejor foto de cada parque nacional que hayas visitado'”. Google Fotos puede mostrarte lo que necesitas, guardándotelo todo. ese desplazamiento, dijo la compañía en un comunicado “. correo.
Además, también puede responder preguntas basadas en esta información. Por ejemplo, un usuario podría preguntar de qué se trata una fiesta en la oficina y la IA escaneará las imágenes y compartirá la información. También puede decirle al usuario qué color de camisa usó ese día. El gigante tecnológico afirma que la herramienta de inteligencia artificial también puede realizar tareas más allá de buscar y responder consultas. La IA también puede crear un momento destacado de un viaje reciente sugiriendo las mejores fotos y escribiendo comentarios personalizados para cada una en caso de que el usuario quiera compartirlas en las redes sociales.
Google también se centra en la privacidad de los datos de los usuarios. Dado que Ask Photos se entrenará en las galerías de fotos privadas de los usuarios, tiene acceso a datos privados y confidenciales. Pero el gigante tecnológico dijo que estos datos nunca se utilizarán para anuncios. La empresa tampoco revisará estas conversaciones y datos personales en Ask Photos a menos que aborden abusos y daños. Los datos tampoco se utilizarán para entrenar ningún producto de inteligencia artificial fuera de Google Photos, dijo la compañía.
Google El martes se celebró un evento de I/O dirigido a desarrolladores. Se esperaba que el evento brindara muchas noticias y anuncios, y no decepcionó.
Nunca nada es seguro, pero a medida que llegamos al evento del martes, Se esperaba que Google Anunciará actualizaciones importantes para su chatbot Gemini. De hecho, hemos recibido una gran cantidad de anuncios de IA, la mayoría de los cuales se centran en Géminis y sus nuevas habilidades.
Aquí encontrará todo lo que se anunció durante la E/S, además de la cobertura correspondiente de Mashable para que pueda profundizar más.
Google Primer anuncio importante De I/O es que agregará una visión general de la inteligencia artificial para la investigación. La esperanza es que la IA pueda tomar múltiples fuentes de información y proporcionar una descripción general pequeña y fácil de entender para los usuarios. prueba de maceraciónSin embargo, hasta ahora he encontrado que la herramienta no es confiable.
Básicamente, parece que podría ser una función de búsqueda avanzada.
Crédito: Captura de pantalla: Google
Los “agentes de IA” también se conocen como asistentes personales de IA.
Google Los agentes de IA debutaron en el evento I/O del martes. El director ejecutivo, Sundar Pichai, dijo que los agentes de IA todavía están en los “primeros días”, pero la idea es que la función pueda completar tareas complejas por usted a través de la IA. Un ejemplo que dio Pichai es la devolución de un par de zapatos, donde un agente de IA puede revisar sus correos electrónicos, completar un formulario de devolución y programar una recogida para devolver los zapatos.
No está claro cuándo los agentes estarán disponibles para el público.
Velocidad de la luz triturable
Proyecto Astra
Google anunció, o al menos mostró una demostración, un nuevo agente de inteligencia artificial que es una herramienta multimedia, lo que significa que puedes apuntar a cosas en la vida real y obtener respuestas. Google lo llama la herramienta Proyecto Astra.
Los ejemplos de la demostración incluyeron reconocer detalles en el código, identificar el vecindario de una persona y determinar la última vez que se vio un artículo extraviado. Sin embargo, no se ha anunciado una fecha específica para que los usuarios accedan a estas funciones.
Es posible que el tweet haya sido eliminado.
Géminis 1.5 Pro y Géminis 1.5 Flash
Google Anunció Gemini 1.5 Pro y Flash en el evento I/O. Ambas son nuevas versiones del modelo de inteligencia artificial de Google. El Pro ayudará a soportar muchas de las nuevas características demostradas en I/O. Gemini 1.5 Flash es básicamente el Pro, pero más rápido.
“Flash es un modelo más ligero en comparación con Pro”, dijo Demis Hassabis, director ejecutivo de Google DeepMind. “Está diseñado para ser rápido y rentable para operar a escala y al mismo tiempo ofrecer increíbles capacidades de inferencia multimodelo y contexto de formato largo”.
El evento I/O de Google trajo algunas novedades para una función que es esencialmente sinónimo del nombre de la empresa. Google dijo que pronto tendrá funciones como búsqueda de videos, planificación mediante búsqueda (como la creación de itinerarios de viaje) y búsqueda contextual.
¿Alguna vez has querido un compañero de trabajo con tecnología de IA? ¿No? Bueno, es una lástima; Quizás consigas uno. Google anunció una nueva función llamada AI Teammate en I/O, que es básicamente un chatbot de IA que actuará como un compañero de trabajo imaginario. Puede servir como centro para todos los detalles compartidos por los compañeros de trabajo mientras completan sus tareas. Ahora, lo quieras o no, es posible que tengas un chatbot que te ayude a realizar tu trabajo.
Es posible que el tweet haya sido eliminado.
Gemini Nano puede detectar llamadas fraudulentas
Llamadas fraudulentas malolientes. En Google I/O, la compañía anunció el Nano, el modelo de IA más pequeño que puede ejecutarse completamente en un dispositivo. ¿Función clave? Puede interceptar una llamada no deseada, lo que significa que la IA escuchará sus llamadas telefónicas.
Google Anunció una nueva aplicación Gemini en I/O, un asistente de IA. La aplicación integrará mensajes de texto, vídeo y voz. También contará con “Gemas”, que son asistentes personales personalizables para actividades específicas como cocinar o hacer ejercicio.
Veo, la respuesta de Google a Sora
Google Por primera vez veo, un generador de vídeo similar a Sora de OpenAI. Hassabis, director ejecutivo de Google Deepmind, prometió que “Veo creará vídeos de 1080p de alta calidad a partir de imágenes de texto e indicaciones de vídeo”. Bueno, eso suena mucho a Sora.
An AI-powered “Clean Up” feature reportedly coming soon to the Apple Photos app could let users eliminate unwanted objects from images. If true, Apple could showcase the rumored image-editing feature Tuesday at its “Let Loose” event.
During the prerecorded product launch, Apple should show off new iPads alongside some updated accessories, like Apple Pencil and Magic Keyboard.
‘Clean Up’ feature coming to Apple Photos app?
As Apple races to catch up to competitors, the company seems uncharacteristically open about efforts to incorporate AI into its products. Just last week, Apple CEO Tim Cook said he and his colleagues “believe in the transformative power and promise of AI.” He also said Apple is “looking forward to an exciting product announcement next week” (without offering specifics, of course).
An update to Apple’s website Monday could offer a hint about the possible Clean Up tool coming to Apple’s Photos app. The homepage now lets users erase various promo images for the Let Loose event just by swiping a cursor over them, like a virtual scratcher ticket.
Clean Up feature uses generative AI to whip images into shape
If it’s a hint, it’s a pretty obvious one. The Clean Up rumor comes from AppleInsider, which cited anonymous sources in its Monday report:
People familiar with Apple’s next-gen operating systems have told AppleInsider that the iPad maker is internally testing an enhanced feature for its built-in Photos application that would make use of generative AI for photo editing. The feature is dubbed “Clean Up” in pre-release versions of Apple’s macOS 15, and is located inside the edit menu of a new version of the Photos application alongside existing options for adjustments, filters, and cropping.
The feature appears to replace Apple’s Retouch tool available on macOS versions of the Photos app. Unlike the Retouch tool, however, the Clean Up feature is expected to offer improved editing capabilities and the option to remove larger objects within a photo.
Advanced photo editing software like Adobe Photoshop already offers similar AI-powered features that let users quickly and easily remove unwanted elements from their images.
Cook last week said Apple sees “generative AI as a very key opportunity across our products. And we believe that we have advantages that set us apart there.”
Apple’s commitment to data privacy is certainly one such advantage. But another one that clearly could apply here is that the Photos app comes free on Apple devices. If Cupertino can bolster its stock apps with pro-level capabilities, that could help sway consumers to buy new Apple gear. Alternatively, Apple could begin charging for certain “pro” features, as it continues to lean on services revenue to bolster its bottom line.
Let Loose event: iPads, Apple Pencil and a hint of AI?
Is erasable imagery on Apple’s website a hint about the Clean Up feature? Screenshot: Apple
If the rumored Clean Up feature in Apple’s Photos app proves real, the company could mention it at the Let Loose event. Such a high-profile reveal could offer potential customers an easy-to-understand glimpse at how AI can improve their everyday experiences with iPads, Macs and iPhones.
The iPad Pros reportedly will feature OLED screens. And they might even run on an Apple M4 chip to better power AI tasks. Meanwhile, the iPad Air lineup is expected to add its first 12.9-inch model.
Apple probably will hold off on its major AI push until this summer’s Worldwide Developers Conference. At the June event, Apple will reveal new features coming to all its software platforms.
Until then, we’ll just have to take Cook at his word when it comes to Apple’s wide-ranging AI ambitions.
“We believe we have advantages that will differentiate us in this new era,” he said last week, “including Apple’s unique combination of seamless hardware, software and services integration, groundbreaking Apple silicon, with our industry-leading neural engines, and our unwavering focus on privacy, which underpins everything we create.”
Adding an AI-powered Clean Up feature to the Photos app could offer a glimpse of things to come.
While there are plenty of video editing tools built into smartphones, it can take some skill to pull off an edit that’s pleasing to the eye. But Google Photos looks set to change that.
By digging into an upcoming version of the Photos app, Android Authority contributor and code-diver Assemble Debug found a feature called “Enhance your videos”, and with a bit of work, got it up and running. As one would guess from the name, the feature is used to enhance videos accessed via the Photos app in a single tap.
Enhance your videos can automatically adjust brightness, contrast, color saturation and other visual parameters for a selected video in order to deliver an edited version that should look better than the original, at least in the eyes of Google.
While this feature isn’t official yet, it may be somewhat familiar to Google Photos users, as there’s already an option to enhance photos in the web and mobile versions of the service. In my experience, the enhance option works rather well, though it’s far from perfect and can overbake its enhancements.
But it makes sense for Google to extend this enhancement function to videos, especially in the TikTok era; do go and check out the TechRadar TikTok for news, views and reactions to the latest tech.
One neat thing about Enhance your video, according to Android Authority, is that all the processing happens on-device, thereby bypassing the need for an internet connection and cloud-based processing. Whether this will work on older phones without AI-centric chipsets remains to be seen.
Given that Assemble Debug got the Enhance your video feature up and running, it looks like it could be nearing an official rollout. We can expect to hear more about this and other upcoming Google features, as well as Android 15, at Google I/O 2024, which is set to kick off on May 14.
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Improved Texting With Android Users: Apple announced that it will support the cross-platform messaging standard RCS in the Messages app on the iPhone starting “later” in 2024, so it will likely be an iOS 18 feature. Compared to SMS, RCS support will improve the texting experience between iOS and Android devices by allowing for higher-resolution photos and videos, audio messages, typing indicators, read receipts, Wi-Fi messaging, and more.
Custom Routes in Apple Maps: At least two new Apple Maps features are expected on iOS 18, including custom routes and topographic maps. Custom routes would allow users to choose specific roads to travel on while navigating, while topographic maps include details such as trails, contour lines, elevation, and points of interest for hiking and other outdoor uses. Apple already introduced topographic maps on the Apple Watch with watchOS 10.
Safari Browsing Assistant: Another new generative AI feature potentially coming with iOS 18 is a browsing assistant in Safari, but no specific details are known yet. There are already multiple iPhone web browsers with AI tools, such as Microsoft Edge and its GPT-4-powered Copilot, and Arc Search, which can summarize web pages to provide concise information.
Next-Generation CarPlay: Apple’s website says the first vehicles with next-generation CarPlay will arrive in 2024, so the platform might debut alongside iOS 18 later this year. However, it is possible that next-generation CarPlay will also be compatible with some iOS 17 versions.
Apple is set to unveil iOS 18 during its WWDC keynote on June 10, so the software update is a little over six weeks away from being announced. Below, we recap rumored features and changes planned for the iPhone with iOS 18. iOS 18 will reportedly be the “biggest” update in the iPhone’s history, with new ChatGPT-inspired generative AI features, a more customizable Home Screen, and much more….
Apple today released several open source large language models (LLMs) that are designed to run on-device rather than through cloud servers. Called OpenELM (Open-source Efficient Language Models), the LLMs are available on the Hugging Face Hub, a community for sharing AI code. As outlined in a white paper [PDF], there are eight total OpenELM models, four of which were pre-trained using the…
Apple has announced it will be holding a special event on Tuesday, May 7 at 7 a.m. Pacific Time (10 a.m. Eastern Time), with a live stream to be available on Apple.com and on YouTube as usual. The event invitation has a tagline of “Let Loose” and shows an artistic render of an Apple Pencil, suggesting that iPads will be a focus of the event. Subscribe to the MacRumors YouTube channel for more …
There are widespread reports of Apple users being locked out of their Apple ID overnight for no apparent reason, requiring a password reset before they can log in again. Users say the sudden inexplicable Apple ID sign-out is occurring across multiple devices. When they attempt to sign in again they are locked out of their account and asked to reset their password in order to regain access. …
Best Buy is discounting a collection of M3 MacBook Pro computers today, this time focusing on the 14-inch version of the laptop. Every deal in this sale requires you to have a My Best Buy Plus or Total membership, although non-members can still get solid second-best prices on these MacBook Pro models. Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Best Buy. When you click a link and make a…
Apple used to regularly increase the base memory of its Macs up until 2011, the same year Tim Cook was appointed CEO, charts posted on Mastodon by David Schaub show. Earlier this year, Schaub generated two charts: One showing the base memory capacities of Apple’s all-in-one Macs from 1984 onwards, and a second depicting Apple’s consumer laptop base RAM from 1999 onwards. Both charts were…
An update to Google Photos could help you better organize pictures and make it easier to find your photos among all those saved memes, WhatsApp pics, and GIFs.
Reliable Tipster AssembleDebug spotted details of the update in the code for Google Photos version 6.79.0.624777117, which seemingly lets you view and organize all the pictures on your phone. However, the main ‘Photos tab’ currently displays not only photos you’ve taken with your phone, but also any downloaded image.
Even with careful folder use, the main Photos tab can easily become a mess of screenshots, album covers and silly GIFs. Add to this images downloaded from social media apps like X, Facebook, and WhatsApp, and it can be difficult to find specific pictures.
Currently, there are some limited filtering options in the In the Library tab, including shortcuts like Favorites, Utilities, Archive, and Bin. However, the update could allow you to filter the photos section with a toggle called ‘Hide clutter,’ which would filter results by hiding unwanted files and making your phone’s storage appear less messy.
According to AssembleDebug, the feature would be located in the photos tab under the ‘Personalize your grid’ section, which is accessed via the three-dot settings menu. However, pictures will still be available in their associated album in the Library tab once filtered and hidden.
New memories
The Memories feature may also be in line for an overhaul. Memories generates auto-playing collections of related pictures set to music, such as those from a day out, and you can edit and customize these selections before easily sharing them.
AssembleDebug claims that an upcoming UI update may change how memories are displayed from the current collection of grouped thumbnails, to a rounded rectangular single image taken from the album, providing a cleaner layout.
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Another change AssembleDebug found was a new setting allowing you to disable the AI memory title suggestions, which can sometimes be inaccurate or wrong, for example labeling a friend or sibling in a romantic context.
You should be able to access the new option in Google Photos settings under Preferences > AI features by Labs. Look for ‘Help me title,’ which you will be able to toggle on or off. Google has also updated its Support Page with this information on how to enable and disable this feature.
While the Google Photos app is a convenient tool for managing your phone’s image library, the current cluttered view could significantly benefit from options like the addition of a ‘Hide clutter’ option and disabling the AI memory title suggestions, and updated UI changes could further streamline and improve the user experience.
However, according to AssembleDebug these features are apparently in the early stages of development, so it may be some time before we see some or all of them on our phones.
Recover and undelete lost photos from an SD card with Stellar Photo Recovery, a versatile tool that can rescue your work from corrupt files and formatting.
The worst nightmare of every content creator is getting back to your Mac, plugging in your SD card, only to find all your work from a photo shoot is missing.
Stellar Photo Recovery can save the heartache. This tool for Mac and PC can restore photos and videos that have been deleted or corrupted from all kinds of storage media and all major cameras.
It’s available from Stellar’s website with a free trial. The Premium version typically costs $69.99, but Cult of Mac readers get an extra $10 discount.
Undelete photos from an SD card
Don’t lose your precious memories. Screenshot: Stellar
It’s easy to see how it might happen — some cameras have confusing, hard-to-navigate user interfaces. You might try to delete one particularly useless blurry shot only to find you’ve deleted everything.
No need to schedule another photo shoot. Using Stellar Photo Recovery, you can bring deleted photos back from the digital graveyard.
Plug your SD card or drive into your Mac and launch Stellar Photo Recovery. Click to select the disk and click Scan. You’ll see the files organized by type; select the ones you want to keep and click Recover to save them to your Mac.
It’s that easy.
Recover from other disks and devices, too
Scan any kind of disk or drive for lost photos. Screenshot: Stellar
But you have to be careful — some cheap SSDs might flake out considering the iPhone’s super-high-quality video output.
If you have a corrupted file, Stellar Photo Recovery can help restore your work. It can handle drives as big as 18 TB and more.
Extra tools and features
Repair corrupt photos and videos, too. Screenshot: Stellar
If you have an older drive that’s starting to wear out, individual sectors that make up the entire disk will become inaccessible. Stellar Photo Recovery can help you pull all the data on the remaining good sectors before the drive kicks the bucket. It’ll create a disk image file that you can run a scan on.
After you run a quick scan on a disk, you can choose to run a more detailed Deep Scan. This can bring up even more files that were deleted without leaving a file signature.
Stellar Photo Recovery supports drives encrypted with BitLocker, too. Select it and click Scan just like any other drive, then enter the BitLocker password.
Extensive support for cameras and formats
Stellar Photo Recovery works with all kinds of storage media:
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You can preview common media formats inside the app to quickly see if it’s found the photos or videos you need. It works with JPEG, RAW, TIFF, PNG, MP4, MOV, FLV, MKV, MP3, OGG and more; including proprietary formats from Nikon, Olympus, Panasonic, Sony, Fuji, Canon and others.
It even supports a swath of file systems, from PC-standard FAT32, ExFAT and NTFS to Apple’s HFS+ and APFS.
Undelete photos from an SD card with Stellar Photo Recovery
Stellar Photo Recovery comes in three versions: Standard, Professional, and Premium.
Standard recovers your photos and videos from all kinds of storage media and cameras. Professional adds the ability to repair corrupt photos. Premium adds the ability to repair corrupt videos and can repair files in bulk.
Download from:Stellar Price: $59.99 for Premium with our discount
The arrival of the total solar eclipse in the US has brought with it an impressive array of photographs as well. If you weren’t able to find a spot to view the eclipse in person—or if it was stuck behind uncooperative clouds—you can at least get a sense of its grandeur through these photographs taken at different points along its journey.
The path of totality began in Mexico on Monday morning, working its way up through Texas by early afternoon. By 4:40 pm ET, it will have left the US entirely and headed into Canada. If you’re in or near its path, make sure to put on approved sunglasses—or make your own pinhole—to view it for yourself. And if you happen to have pets or live near wildlife, NASA could use a hand figuring out how animals respond to the eclipse.
Otherwise, enjoy these incredible photos of a total solar eclipse in North America. The next one is 20 years away.
A photographic archive has been discovered in Lyon, France, that adds precious detail to what we know about the founding of the world’s first police crime laboratory in 1910 and its creator, Edmond Locard, a pioneer of forensic science.
The huge collection, which comprises more than 20,000 glass photographic plates that document the laboratory’s pioneering scientific methods, crime scenes and Locard’s personal correspondence, is thrilling historians at a time when many consider that forensic science has lost its way. “There is a movement to look back to the past for guidance as to how to renew the science of policing,” says Amos Frappa, a historian affiliated with the Sociological Research Centre on Law and Criminal Institutions in Paris, who is overseeing the analysis of the images.
She was convicted of killing her four children. Could a gene mutation set her free?
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many people in Europe and beyond were thinking about how criminals might be accurately identified by using techniques such as fingerprint, blood and skeletal analysis. Locard was the first person to create the semblance of forensic science. He established the first scientific lab that came under the aegis of the police, and that was dedicated to studying ‘traces’ of criminal activity collected from crime scenes.
Garage find
The collection of photographic plates almost didn’t survive. It languished for decades in a garage belonging to the National Forensic Police Department in Ecully, a Lyon suburb. In 2005, the glass plates were rescued from the garage and stored in Lyon’s municipal archives. But at the time, the Lyon archives lacked the resources to treat the collection properly, says director Louis Faivre d’Arcier. It wasn’t until 2017 that an inspection revealed that the plates’ gelatine layer containing the image information was, in many cases, infected with mould. After a sorting and decontamination project in 2022, conservators saved around two-thirds of the plates.
Left: A tattooed woman named Marie-Clémentine in 1934; Edmond Locard’s team used tattoos as a way of identifying potential criminals. Right: Handwriting analysis as a means of identification was investigated but later spurned by Locard, who deemed it unreliable.Credit: Archives municipales de Lyon
The mammoth task of digitizing the contents of the fragile plates, which are mostly unindexed and disordered, became possible only when a local publisher and historian of funerary practices, Nicolas Delestre, offered to finance it. In collaboration with the municipal archives, his team developed a photographic protocol to capture as much information from the plates as possible. The digitization will be completed this spring, to coincide with the publication of Frappa’s French-language biography of Locard. The slow rebuilding of the indexes continues.
Locard, who worked in the early to mid-twentieth century, is famous for his maxim, which is usually formulated in English as “Every contact leaves a trace.” Trained as a forensic pathologist, he turned to the study of trace evidence after a French political scandal called the Dreyfus affair, in which a Jewish army officer called Alfred Dreyfus was falsely accused of espionage. During the affair, Locard’s mentor Alphonse Bertillon, who had invented a method of identifying people through bodily measurements, was called on as a handwriting specialist, despite having no expertise in the field. He wrongly identified Dreyfus as the author of an incriminating note.
Forensic science: The soil sleuth
Locard, seeing other countries adopt fingerprint identification, embraced that method instead. In 1910, he set up his laboratory in the attic of Lyon’s main courthouse, and gradually expanded his scientific analyses to include traces such as blood, hair, dust and pollen.
Sherlock Holmes connection
This much was known from published sources, but the photographic archive offers details about the social and intellectual milieu that produced Locard, onthe scientific networks in which he was embedded, and on how his thinking evolved as he experimented and made errors. His exchanges with contemporaries in countries including Germany, Switzerland, Italy and the United States shaped his approach, which might be why he did not consider himself a founder of a new field. But Locard’s ideas — his scientific methods and his insistence on meticulously studying crime scenes — fell on fertile ground in Lyon’s police chiefs and judges, who, unlike their Parisian counterparts, accepted the evidence that such approaches generated. “Lyon was a receptacle,” says Frappa.
Edmond Locard using a photographic bench in the 1920s.Credit: Archives municipales de Lyon
The new collection reveals Locard’s team at work. It captures their equipment and experiments, and the forensic traces they analysed. The close-knit group socialized together, received international visitors and investigated myriad means by which people could be identified. One way was to look at people’s tattoos, and the collection contains a large set of tattoo images. Locard took inspiration from many sources, including the Lyon-based Lumière brothers, who were pioneers of cinematography, and the creator of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, with whom he corresponded. In time, Locard discarded some techniques — notably, handwriting analysis — deeming them unreliable.
Since 2009, when a report from the US National Research Council found that many modern forensic techniques were inadequately grounded in science, the discipline has struggled to reorient itself. “By the late 20th century, it’s fair to say that forensic science had become an adjunct of law enforcement without allegiance to science,” says Simon Cole, who studies criminology, law and society at the University of California, Irvine, and directs the US National Registry of Exonerations. Cole has written about the problems with fingerprint identification, and last year reported on the fallibility of microscopic hair comparison. These techniques are routinely used to investigate crimes in the United States and elsewhere, and the evidence they generate is admissible in court.
Modern troubles
The 2009 report suggested that improving forensic science would require larger labs in which diverse specialists were insulated from each other and from the police to prevent bias. The trouble with that view, says Olivier Ribaux, director of the School of Criminal Sciences at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, is that, when considering the potentially infinite number of traces that a crime scene can generate, some subjective selection by humans is inevitable. To ensure that this selection is as informative and as unbiased as possible, the forensic scientist must understand a trace in its context — as Locard’s maxim in French originally implied. “The problem with the big labs is that they have severed the connection with the crime scene,” Ribaux says.
He favours an alternative model in which smaller labs employ generalists, who can oversee specialists in certain fields, such as ballistics and DNA, but can also offer a more holistic view of a case. These generalists would work closely with the police — a return to Locard’s approach, in other words. But the two aren’t mutually exclusive, Ribaux says. They are just snapshots of the ongoing debate about how the field should reinvent itself.
That debate will surely be fuelled by the emerging portrait of Locard, sometimes dubbed the French Sherlock Holmes, whom Frappa describes as “a man so visionary he predicted, correctly, that he would be forgotten”.
This week, Samsung started rolling out a new update to its pro-grade mobile photography app, Expert RAW. The update pushes the app to version 3.0.05.12 and brings one major feature photography enthusiasts should find very useful.
Namely, Expert RAW v3.0.05.12 now lets users capture lossless RAW photos. This new option optimizes image quality by capturing RAW images in lossless format. However, the downside is that lossless photos use more storage.
You can grab this new Expert RAW update from the Galaxy Store. Once you have it, you can try this new feature by opening the app, accessing the app’s settings menu, and ensuring the “Lossless RAW” quick toggle is ON.
One thing to keep in mind is that the Lossless RAW option is available only for some resolutions, not all. We tested this feature on a Galaxy S24+, and we can confirm it is grayed out when using the 50MP shooting mode.
However, you can turn Lossless RAW ON or OFF on the Galaxy S24+ if you have the 12MP or 24MP shooting mode selected in the viewfinder. Needless to say, your mileage with this Lossless RAW option might vary depending on which Galaxy phone you use.