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Adobe Demos Photo Unblurring At MAX 2011

karthikmns writes with word of an amazing demo presented last week at Adobe's annual MAX convention. You'll have to watch the video, but the enthusiastic crowd reaction seems genuine (or at least justified), even in an audience full of Photoshop enthusiasts, as photographs are algorithmically deblurred. (Maybe in the future, cameras will keep records of their own motion in metadata to assist such software efforts, rather than relying on in-built anti-shake software.) No word about when this will turn up for consumers in anything besides demo form, but I suspect similar software's already in use at Ft. Meade and Langley.

2 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Interpolated missing data is still just a ficti by mfwitten · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think it would be better to say that [most of] the data are already present; the data just happen to be initially in an unwanted form.

  2. Re:Interpolated missing data is still just a ficti by Artraze · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, and really no to everyone else. This is making _obfuscated_ data suddenly because visible.

    It characterizes the the motion of the camera from the blur then reverses it: essentially an image stabilization algorithm. It's like making voices audible over loud music by figuring out what the song is and subtracting it from the mix.

    It's cool, but not magic. They aren't even pretending to add in missing data like a CSI zoom. Nor does it even seem to take care of simple out of focus situations. So let's not get too excited, well, unless you've got a cheap/slow camera.