whoBIRD Android App: Real-time Bird Sound Identification for 6,000+ Species
By
proactivesvcs
Master baker tier. Every paragraph earns its place on the tray.
Summary
whoBIRD is an Android application that uses machine learning to identify bird sounds in real time, featuring a database of over 6,000 bird species worldwide. The app works offline on-device without requiring internet connection, powered by the BirdNET project's technology.
Key quotes
· 4 pulledwhoBIRD - Identify bird sounds in real time
Powered by the cutting-edge BirdNET project, whoBIRD boasts an extensive database of over 6,000 bird species worldwide
Using advanced machine learning algorithms, this Android app can accurately identify birds based on their unique vocalizations
whoBIRD performs its magic in real time entirely on your device, without requiring an internet connection
You might also wanna read
Wildex App: AI-Powered Wildlife Identification and Nature Collection Tool
Wildex is a mobile app that uses AI to instantly identify plants, animals, birds, insects, and other wildlife through smartphone camera. The
Engineering Professor Explains How Electric Cars Work and Answers Common EV Questions
Professor Willett Kempton, an electrical and computer engineering expert from the University of Delaware, answers common internet questions
#NYTechWeek Panel: Addressing the Youth Cybersecurity Talent Gap
This article announces a panel event at #NYTechWeek focused on the cybersecurity talent gap among young people. Moderated by Girls Who Code
How to upload and manage article metadata in DOAJ
This article explains how journals indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) can upload article metadata. It describes the met
Five Levels of Telegram Spam Sophistication and Why Most Anti-Spam Bots Only Catch the First Two
This article provides a technical breakdown of five levels of Telegram spam sophistication observed through running an AI-powered anti-spam
cstu.io·9h agoMassachusetts invests $25M in MIT's new Quantum Systems Laboratory for quantum computing research
MIT is launching a Quantum Systems Laboratory in Cambridge, backed by a $25 million state investment from Massachusetts. The facility aims t
