Cleaning Up Shaky Home Video
January 8th 2009 22:35
Video-enhancing software developed for the CIA is coming to consumers.
An annoying side effect of ubiquitous video cameras--on cell phones and digital still cameras, for instance--is ubiquitous low-quality videos. YouTube is rife with them: shaky soccer games, dimly lit baby's first steps, and pixelated party clips. Next month, however, software maker MotionDSP, based in San Mateo, CA, will release a $40 download for PCs that could clean up some of the most annoying aspects of subpar video, from shakes to low light. The product, called vReveal, is aimed at the average home videographer who wants better vacation clips but doesn't want to invest in serious video-editing software.
By Kate Greene
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Vivid video: MotionDSP will offer consumer software that can take low-quality video (left) and convert it into high-quality video (right) by analyzing the characteristics of pixels across a number of frames. Credit: MotionDSP
By Kate Greene
READ MORE HERE
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