music related searches - i like Band X.... find me similar
No practical use for a bit of software that tells you which thing is
like the others? This service isn't meant to be useful - its showing
off something that is useful elsewhere.
> Honestly, I don't really see a use to this...
To generate keywords, for websites and image stocks.
I can imaging how this could be useful for very many purposes.
Few scenarious where you probably can't use regular search for finding
what you're looking for:
1) Imagine you have forgotten high-school trig terms; sine, cosine and
tangent would result secant, cosecant and more math terms
2) birght, cheerful, happy would result delighted, joyful and so on
notice delighted is related to our three terms and the thesaurus
probably won't give you this
This is why i suggest using Google sets
Just a note: this is already used in there searches in a beta
format.....it will eventually be used in a non-beta format.
By using 'Googel Sets', **I knew the some other names of actors of that
language.
ex: Amitabh Bachchan,Salman Khan,Sharuk Khan for finding other actors
in Indian(Hindi) films.
skva...@gmail.com wrote:
...
> Few scenarious where you probably can't use regular search for finding
> what you're looking for:
>
> 1) Imagine you have forgotten high-school trig terms; sine, cosine and
> tangent would result secant, cosecant and more math terms
> ...
Based on Google Image Labeler and Google Sets, just play finding the
related and un related words, concepts and images.
You could set the initial words. Google sets generates a set from that
initial list. From that set, select the words not related, and insert
new related words. Maybe Google Sets could also show some pictures and
use them for/from Image Labeler.
This way you could aid training Google's IA, our future no-evil
powerfull overlord.
There are several ways of distinguishing the continents.
7 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Australia, North America, South
America, Europe, Asia
6 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Australia, America, Europe, Asia
6 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Australia, North America, South
America, Eurasia
5 continents: Africa, Antarctica, Australia, America, Eurasia
On Jan 7, 7:33 am, "CC" <CCS....@gmail.com> wrote:
> I thought it was totally cool for finding all the companies that make a
> particular kind of thing (Cars, electronics, toys). That's great for
> researching many things in a given class. Or, being a "data freak", you
> just have to remember the other names in a set ("I can remember five of
> the continents, but what were the other two?" - Okay, so maybe it's
> better at brands than geography.) From an identification point of view,
> it seems to be a quick way to get other related words/names and a much
> better way to find alternate terms than searching the web, viewing a
> few results until finding a search term that might narrow it down.
>
> skvas...@gmail.com wrote:...
>
>
>
> > Few scenarious where you probably can't use regular search for finding
> > what you're looking for:
>
> > 1) Imagine you have forgotten high-school trig terms; sine, cosine and
> > tangent would result secant, cosecant and more math terms
> > ...
> > This is why i suggest using Google sets
>
> > karanasr...@gmail.com wrote:
> > > Honestly, I don't really see a use to this...- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -