We can now search for any phrase spoken in any Apple event.  This website makes it possible and surprises us with the results

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We can now search for any phrase spoken in any Apple event. This website makes it possible and surprises us with the results

Apple, Event, Phrase, results, search, spoken, surprises, website

In addition to its own website, the most information about Apple in terms of products, features, functions and more, comes from the keynotes that he offers us throughout the year. Some keynotes, like the iPhone 14 Pro, are then available for us to review, but what happens when we look for a specific moment in one or more presentations?

That’s what you must have asked for in Context. And they answered their artificial intelligence platform capable of searching content in videos. The result is a search engine in which we can locate the fragments that interest us among all the Apple keynotes.

And so we know that “Disney” has been said 105 times

Context has been developing its search engine for several years. One that, according to its own website, “allows you to search large video or audio collections” very quickly and accurately. Just what we need to locate, from Of all the keynotes from Apple, that phrase or data we want to see. All we have to do is go to addcontext.xyz and enter our search on the page.

Note that we’re not talking about just looking for the latest keynotes that had space production and there was no storyline per se. We are talking about search virtually every keynote Apple has given away. A collection that includes all videos since 1983.

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The truth is that the results are most interesting. A search like “are you merging iOS and macOS” quickly tells us that this happened two hours, four minutes, and 41 seconds into the WWDC 2018 conference. clicking on the result takes us to the YouTube video of this conference developers, just in time.

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Other interesting results are to be found in the famous commentary by Steve Jobs “Now stop me if you’ve ever seen this”, following leaks of the iPhone 4 before its launch, or the number of times the word “Disney” appears in keynotes. 105 times, by the way.

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A useful curiosity, we can call you. A resource that, without a doubt, greatly facilitates the quick search for audiovisual content that, otherwise, we would have to examine manually to locate the fragment that interests us. And also a way to draw other conclusions of the appearance of certain words and terms, such as “iPhone” appearing 2824 times.

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