Photosynth Team Does It Again
STFS found an update to the
Photosynth stories that we already ran. You might remember the amazing photo tourism demos. Well, this new version kicks things up several notches with paths and color correction to more smoothly transition between photos taken in different lighting conditions. As before, this stuff is worth your time. Check it out.
And THIS is why I tend to take huge numbers of photos and never delete any... Technology like this will account for easy geotagging, date I already have in the EXIF data, whereas people can be tagged with face recognition soon enough.
That done, I'll be able to navigate my tens of thousands of photos by asking for things like photos taken of the kids while outside at the cottage when they were 3 years old.
Also, remember to backup! :)
.: Max Romantschuk
It looks like taking a video would be easier. That way, you wouldn't have to spend time stringing all the stills to together - if I understood correctly.
Microsoft had better not repeat google's slight miscalculation. The credits given to the flicker accounts tell that they must of had to opt in, unlike streetview. This photosynth system would be incredibly powerful if it used all flicker images or crawled the web. People are clearly visible everywhere in this system, and some may become upset.
If this was an OSS project, your post would have been rated "flamebait".
It's a bit dense and involves some cross references, but here's a part which may answer some of your questions. For more detail you oculd always read the paper yourself.
Yes, and this is nothing like that. That was apparently creating additional information that simply wasn't in the original photo. This is using a whole bunch of photos of the same scene, taken at different times, angles, etc to automatically build up a 3d model. Nothing is being enhanced, you're "merely" being shown the most appropriate, pre-existing photo based on your location and view direction in the generated 3D model.
Damn cool tech, but not the same as that used in Blade Runner (or CSI, or any other "enhance this photo to make that illegible squiggle that's beyond the resolution of the photo readable" plot device)
It's official. Most of you are morons.
Microsoft have turned Photo Tourism into something incredibly more powerful. But don't let that get you off your high horse. Some of us don't play the "them" and "us" game.
Huh? Why not get out there, meet people from those countries, eat the food they eat, get drunk with them, and actually experience the world?
Of course! Because every familiy has the time and resources to visit every possible interesting place on the planet.
Huh? Why not get out there, meet people from those countries, eat the food they eat, get drunk with them, and actually experience the world?
Ummm, because we can't afford it? Taking six people to Greece would consume our family vacation budget for 3-4 years. I'd rather stay closer to home and spend more time with my kids.
Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
That done, I'll be able to navigate my tens of thousands of photos by asking for things like photos taken of the kids while outside at the cottage when they were 3 years old.
That raises an interesting concept. Could they do a 4D orbit? For example identify pictures of your kids at different ages and then you could watch them grow up in front of your eyes. Or watch how a city street changes over a decade? That would be really interesting...shame it will probably only every be available for Windows.
There are other features that I don't see how they're getting, such as the zones where photos were shot from. That takes an awful lot of extrapolation.
I suspect it isn't as complex as you think - exif tags usually include focus distance and focal length. Also included with that is sensor size or camera model, which will tell you effective focal length.
When you combine that info with the apparent size of the object in the photo (i.e. statue of liberty is x percentage of the frame high), you should be able to get a reasonable estimation on where the picture was shot from.
For relatively isolated objects (like the statue of liberty), I'd assume you'd need a single shot w/ a known location to act as an anchor (it's possible with cameras that support gps) - but I wouldn't be surprised if a mathematician could get around that. Perhaps angle of the sun at time / date (exif again), but I'd assume that would take significant processing and have all sorts of things that would screw it up.
I know DXO can analyze a jpeg or raw to get the model of a lens - presume it's stored in exif somewhere - and lens distortion can be corrected w/ a x% pincushion adjustment to the photo based on known values - DXO has a fairly huge database and I wouldn't be surprised if they were using some of their tech.
Either that or the guys here fudged it by only using pictures from a specific make / model of camera.
I suspect that they would use the distance estimation in exif to eliminate the statues, etc - although I'm guessing a fair number of statues would be eliminated because they aren't scaled properly. Autofocus distance estimations can be off, but not usually hundreds of meters off.
As for cross photo whitebalance / color gimpiness across the frame, that can be relatively easily corrected - autostich (free) and autopano pro (the "pro version" of autostitch) does it and they've licensed their stuff to a bunch of other companies.
Also... keep in mind they really aren't displaying high res imagery - so they can estimate / tweak a bit. I don't know if that will scale, or if it does, what the processing requirements will be, but it's probably not a huge concern.
It's clearly not as simple as they try to make it (they really only used a small amount of image sets), but I don't think it's a photoshop job.
The question is whether it will scale.
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Ok folks, don't worry!
Just keep chanting the mantra that Microsoft never innovates anything and everything will be ok.
I'm sure there will be a linux port of this soon and then we can all go back to complaining about how Microsoft copies everything from Apple.