There's no need for Google Lens. The image shows an LLM chat interface below the satallite imagery where the user is asking what significant events happened near Budapest airport on the capture date.
That said: it's actually fascinating that Google Lens found that so quickly. I guess there are many overhead photos of airports, and each airport has a relatively distinct shape?
I subconsciously block anything LLM-chat related by default, just as I do with ads. I tried looking through a source of that photo in the text above, text which seemed less AI-coded, but wasn't lucky (or I didn't know where to look).
> it's actually fascinating that Google Lens found that so quickly
It's one of their (relatively few) most recent successes, yes, of which not that many tech people are talking about. Or at least I haven't seen it discussed on forums like this one. For example it's also particularly good at image finding locations based on pieces of architecture seen in the photo backgrounds, let's say part of a church, a mayor's office, stuff like that.
Being able to google lens whatever can be seen of a gothic-like cathedral in the background of a photo and getting the name of the cathedral and of the city itself almost instantly is some CSI-level stuff, again, a rare win for public-facing tech these days.
That said: it's actually fascinating that Google Lens found that so quickly. I guess there are many overhead photos of airports, and each airport has a relatively distinct shape?