Joins the Lineup of Pet Recovery Tools.
Facial recognition is a new tool for pet recovery available to dog and cat owners. Now a lost cat or dog may be just a smartphone away. Two companies, Finding Rover and PiP (which stands for Positive Identification of Pet), have developed pet facial recognition applications (“apps”) to help reunite lost pets with their owners. Fanciers can use these alternative pet identification apps on iPhone® and Android™ platforms in several countries including the United States, Canada, and Australia. Finding Rover also works on the internet. These smartphone apps avoid some of the issues associated with other pet recovery technologies. They are not dependent on collars and tags that can be lost, microchips that can migrate or fail, or tattoos that can fade. Although avoiding these pitfalls, these apps are similar to the microchip animal identification system in some ways and are different in other ways.
Both apps involve unique identifiers and a database. Unlike microchips, however, there are no invasive procedures to implant any technology in a pet or surgery to remove it. Animal Control and other pet finders do not need any specialized equipment like the universal scanners needed to read microchips. All that is needed is a smartphone, or a camera and computer hooked up to the internet – technology that people frequently have on hand.
So, how does this type of facial recognition work?
This story is from the February 2017 edition of Cat Talk.
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This story is from the February 2017 edition of Cat Talk.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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Library Cats felis cattus bibliotheca
Introduction - The Middle Ages, sometimes referred to as “The Dark Ages,” spanned approximately one thousand years, between 479 AD and 1450 AD. This time period is not generally considered to have been friendly to anyone, human nor animal, but it was especially hostile toward felines. Ignorance of knowledge and science was rampant among the majority of the population, with the ability to read limited to clerics and the wealthy. Myths, legends, and galliard songs spread widely throughout Europe as people migrated from place to place, searching for food and a safe habitat. Fear of the unknown and the unexplainable, particularly of witches and their cat familiars, was spread not only by the stories and songs, but by the Popes themselves. Without touching on the atrocities of medieval times, let us just say it was not the best time to be a cat.
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