Doctors usually write prescriptions in a hurry, making it almost impossible for their patients to understand what they have written.
And in a strange way, the pharmacists carry out the prescription without any problems and without resenting the chicken carvings of the recipe.
This problem of no one but doctors understanding the font has existed for decades, and many tech companies have tried to solve it with little to no success.
Now h Google he tries to translate these incomprehensible texts. At its annual conference in India announced that it is working with pharmacists to train its Google Lens program so that it can process doctors' handwriting.
The feature, which will be coming to Google Lens, will allow users to either take a photo of the recipe or upload it from the photo library. Once the image is processed, the app will detect and highlight the drugs mentioned in it.
Of course the implementation will be based on artificial intelligence to enable the program to be trained in medical "chicken carvings". The company did not say when it plans to roll out the new feature to users widely.