Entertainment

New App Lets Users Easily Search And Extract Information From Photos, Turning Your Phone Camera Into A Visual Assistant

Retana, an AI-powered camera application, today announces the launch of its iOS app which allows users to easily search and extract information from their digital camera rolls. The app recognizes text, objects, phone numbers and email addresses in photos, giving users the power to transform visual information into searchable and actionable objects.

Retana works like a camera app, maintaining its own searchable library of photos which are securely backed up on the cloud. However, unlike traditional camera rolls, Retana uses AI and natural language understanding to analyze photos for text, objects and other defining attributes that might be used to search for the photo later on. Users can then include additional tags and search for the photos using both text and a hands-free voice assistant, eliminating the need to manually organize and hunt for photos hidden deep in their camera rolls.

Moreover, the app frees visual information which would otherwise be trapped in photos — such as street addresses, place names, phone numbers and email addresses — making it easily actionable within the app. If users take a photo of a business card, for example, the app instantly recognizes the phone number and allows users to call without ever having to type it in.

Retana’s iOS app is free to use, but also offers two subscription plans with additional features: Retana Basic and Retana Pro. For $0.99 a month, Retana Basic includes text transcription and calling and emailing directly from photos for up to 100 photos per month. For $4.99, Retana Pro offers the same basic features but with up to 1,000 photos per month.

Thanks to higher quality smartphone cameras, people are now taking more than 1.2 trillion digital photos per year. With a growing amount of photos stored on phones, it is therefore proving harder for people to organize their photo libraries or find specific photos. Rather than having to scroll through endless photos to re-find that one picture of the wifi router, for example, the Retana app extracts and stores this information directly from the photo, saving time and stress whenever someone asks for the wifi password.

“Computer vision is going to enable us to work better, shop better, and quickly get information about the world around us. Retana is the first step to turning your camera into a visual assistant,” said Juan Soberanis, CEO of Retana.

Retana’s mission is to bridge the visual world with the digital world in order to help people be better informed and more productive. Just as AI is assisting more people in other aspects of their daily tasks, now it can be used to bring intelligence to people’s cameras, too.

 

Sam Brake Guia

Sam is an energetic and passionate writer/presenter, always looking for the next adventure. In August 2016 he donated all of his possessions to charity, quit his job, and left the UK. Since then he has been on the road travelling through North, Central and South America searching for new adventures and amazing stories.

View Comments

  • This is a super handy app for organizing all of the images reminders I take, so they don’t get deleted in the depths of my camera roll.

Recent Posts

DARPA O-Circuit program wants drones that can smell danger with ‘a new class of biologically inspired computer’

DARPA's O-Circuit program looks to build a new class of biologically inspired computer equipped with…

1 day ago

How a ten-day bootcamp is helping students at Delhi Public School hone their AI skills 

As AI races into classrooms worldwide, Google is finding that the toughest lessons on how…

1 day ago

WEF promotes eat the bugs agenda in ‘new nature economy’ report

The push to eat bugs is not an organic movement coming from the people, but…

2 days ago

Africa’s Digital Assets Push Gets an Upgrade as ADAS Teams-Up With CEO’s Forum

As Africa’s digital economy accelerates, a new partnership between the Africa Digital Assets Summit 2026…

3 days ago

Why companies can’t afford black-box AI anymore

The State of Generative AI in the Enterprise report from Menlo Ventures found that companies…

3 days ago

From one donor, thousands of doses: Meet the startup making cell therapy accessible

Living therapies, made of engineered immune cells – and capable of hunting down cancer, reversing…

3 days ago