Today, I'm happy to announce that we're releasing Picasa 3.5, a new version of our free photo editing software. This version gives you the ability to add name tags to your photos, using the same facial recognition technology that powers name tags on Picasa Web Albums. Name tags are designed to help you organize your photos by what matters most: the people in them. Picasa identifies similar faces and puts these into an "Unnamed People" album. From there, you can easily add a name tag by clicking "Add a name" and typing the person's name. After you've added name tags to some photos, you can use your tags to do creative things, like quickly find all the photos with the same two people in them, make a face collage with just one click or upload and share people albums with friends.
In addition to name tags, Picasa 3.5 has integrated Google Maps, so you can easily geotag your photos or view the locations of already-tagged photos on a map. And using our totally redesigned import process, you can now import photos from your camera and upload the photos to Picasa Web Albums in one easy step.
Picasa 3.5 is available for both PC and Mac, in English for now. You can download and try it today at picasa.google.com.
Related Posts
We have a winner for the Google Photography Prize
26 Jun 20090Huge congratulations to Daniel Halasz from Hungary, who was awarded the Google Photography Prize thi...Read more »
Voting for iGoogle photo themes now open
12 Jun 20090A few weeks ago we launched the Google Photography Prize, a global student competition for students ...Read more »
Picasa Web Albums stays big, gets faster
04 Jun 20090I use Picasa to manage the photos on my computer in part because it's the fastest way to manage all ...Read more »
Introducing Picasa for Mac (at Macworld!)
05 Jan 20090Sometimes I find it hard to describe Picasa without sounding like a late-night infomercial for a mul...Read more »
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
0 nhận xét:
Đăng nhận xét
Click to see the code!
To insert emoticon you must added at least one space before the code.