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Google Launches Two New Features to Celebrate 25 Years of Google Images

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Google Images may not be making headlines on the regular, but the tool has a storied history that's spanned decades. To mark its 25-year anniversary, I met with Google Lens co-founder Lou Wang to discuss the evolution of visual search at Google and two new features rolling out now.

In July 2001, Google launched its images search tool after Jennifer Lopez broke the internet for the first time with her iconic green Versace dress at the 2000 Grammy Awards. Over the next decade, it evolved from text queries for images to reverse-image searches using uploaded images or URLs.

In 2017, Google took the next jump in visual search with the launch of Google Lens. Lens was initially integrated with Google Photos and Google Assistant, then moved to the main search box. With the introduction of Multisearch -- combining text and image inputs -- and Circle to Search -- enabling context-aware search of an image without switching apps -- Google gave people a new way to search: with their camera rather than with text alone.

During the AI boom over the last two years, AI Mode integrations, Search Live capabilities, visual reasoning powered by Gemini models, "Find the Look" fashion outfit matching and multi-image search inputs have made searching with imagery more natural and intuitive than ever.

Read also: The 6 Google AI and Lens Tricks I Rely on for Smooth, Hassle-Free Travel

New ways to explore and create images in Google

In addition to the visual search timeline, Wang said that Google is introducing two new features in Google Images and Search.

A browsable home for Google Images

Wang said Google is rolling out a browsable homepage for Google Images, featuring a dynamic, real-time image gallery tailored to user interests with tabbed collections to keep track of saved ideas.

Similar to creating a board on Pinterest or creating a collection on TikTok, you can save thematically similar visuals to one location for easy access. Say you're researching for a trip to Malaysia, for instance. You can create a collection titled "Malaysia" that will show up as a tab above the main gallery, where you can save all of your ideas or trip inspiration in one place.

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