Seeing Around Corners With Dual Photography
An anonymous reader writes "This project (which is part of this year's SIGGRAPH) has absolutely blown my mind. Basically they photograph an object with the photosensor at one point, and the light projector at another, and use the Helmholtz reciprocity algorithm to virtually switch the locations of the camera and projector, showing exactly what the light source "sees"! If that doesn't make sense to you, check out the research page and make sure to watch the 60MB video at the bottom. The playing card trick will leave you speechless!"
isn't this just the same in principle as ray tracing? or am I missing something
They can edit the article once Mirrordot has completed mirroring. It does it so quickly that I assume it has a subscription and can take advantage of the subscriber-only period.
Finding the g-spot is quite easy. There is a great book that has pointers...
2 6/qid=1115728290/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i1_xgl/026- 2537690-7222055
:-) [or should I say, let her enjoy?]
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/18901590
Enjoy
because not even Sanford can handle the traffic and now we cant even see the html never mind the video ?
not every server at sanford is sitting directly facing internet2 with load balancing server clusters and tb of ram, perhaps ?
Someday soon, the owners of a site that gets slashdotted are going to sue faster than CmdrTaco can say "tort reform". It's irresponsible to post, unedited, an article suggesting readers download a 60mb movie without first making some effort to mirror/torrent the file and/or site.
Even mirrordot got crushed... Seriously, what was the submiter thinking? Not to mention the editors.
The real question is why nobody made a torrent of this video before the story went live. Bittorrent is one of the posterchildren of open source and legit p2p, it's unfortunate that here on Slashdot, the center of the community, nobody ever bothers to use it for it's intended purpose. We have an opportunity to put a great FOSS project to a vitally needed user, but instead they choose to continue crushing servers. Sigh...
Don't blame their webserver/fileserver for not being able to see the movie they raved about.
It is the laziness and irresponsibility of the slashdot editors to not provide a bittorrent link.
I am disgusted that slashdot raves about a site/file/mpeg then DDOSs
it so that nobody sees it. This is particularly bad when a hobbyist site is crushed.
Mod me into oblivion, I don't care.
Gosh, how fascinating. Now compare this to a *really cool* imaging technique, like using an x-ray beam and an array of photodiodes to detect the scatter patterns as the beam passes through a human body, then calculate an image of the actual bones and organs inside. It's called Computed Axial Tomography or a CAT scan. And if you want something *realy really* cool, check out the technique that uses a magnetic field gradient to delay the re-emission of photons from an RF pulse, and then calculates the position of molecules in a body from their RF scinillations. Its called Magnetic Resonance Imaging or MRI. Somwhow I think the images they produce are slightly more profound that scanning the back of a playing card. Consider yourselves offcially Harumphed.
"Sic Semper Path of Least Resistance"
Forget that. This would be a perfect application for Dijjer.
Rather than dual photography I would be more inclined to describe the method as real-world ray tracing. A focused pixel of light is captured for each pixel of the light source, then the scene is transformed so that the camera image is in the plane of the light source and the lighting function discovered earlier is inverted.
The article claims that there is no need to describe the geometry of the scene, and I understand why that is true for the structure of the subject, but it seems as though the geometry of the light and camera would still have to be known. Anything that isn't in view of the camera in the first image is unlit in the second image, and vice versa, but I don't understand how you would determine what transformation would result in that exchange without any information on the camera-light geometry in relation to the scene.
LibBT: BitTorrent for C - small - fast - clean (Now Versio
In fact, I can't see how this is a million miles away from what Logi Baird did with a Mechanical scanner, other than being more general.
/.ing - !
Oh, comments above have to be interpreted in the light of the fact that I can't RTFA because of
Ian
*--BigMan--- Time flies like an arrow.. but personally I prefer a nice glass of wine!
To analyze the projector's image quickly, they need to control the projector, sampling its pixels' images to factor out redundant pixels. Trojan-horse programs which control the projector probably won't trigger current antivirus SW. Any screen can now spy on you, if a camera can only get a glimpse of its reflected light. Combined with laser microphones, you're on candid camera! Beware untrusted screensavers!
--
make install -not war
All they are doing is intensifying a reflection, that is not "seeing around corners." If they did the feat without the book present, then I would be impressed.
With this technology, any man can find the g-spot.
Unlikely -- you'd still need to get the light source in there somehow...