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View Full Version : Finally Fix Blurred Photos!



John P. Myers
10-24-12, 07:55 PM
Ever taken a photo which resulted in motion blur or blur caused from being out of focus? We all have, and we've all trashed these photos and tried again to take a better one if the opportunity was still there. But now there's a nifty piece of software which some are calling "groundbreaking" and "revolutionary" that corrects these defects called SmartDeblur. And it's Free! But it's for Windows only. The results aren't perfect, but it's definitely a hell of an improvement.

1164




Download here: http://yuzhikov.com/projects.html

Fire$torm
10-24-12, 09:18 PM
Kool! Thx for the info.

zombie67
10-25-12, 12:16 AM
Or better yet (maybe), a camera that is never out of focus. It takes pictures, focusing on all things at once. Then, after the the picture is taken, then choose the point of focus that you like best. Focus after the fact!

https://www.lytro.com/

http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/lytro


Overall conclusion

The Lytro LFC is unlike any consumer camera we've ever seen before - it captures fundamentally different information and produces output unlike any conventional model. Lytro must be commended for having made something so comparatively consumer-ready without the financial backing or years of experience that the major camera makers can fall back on.

Sadly, we're not fully convinced by the Lytro, conceptually interesting though it is. The limitations of the current LFC, both in terms of final resolution and the limited range of scenes its can bring something interesting to, mean we'd struggle to recommend it.

As a 'don't worry about focus' point-and-shoot, the Lytro isn't terribly successful - sharpness of close subjects isn't great in Everyday mode and the camera can't focus its lens fast enough to make Creative mode a credible alternative. Either way, the final resolution of 1080 x 1080 is simply too low to make it useful for much more than Facebook. The lack of control over any shooting functions, including white balance can also spoil the results.

It perhaps makes a little more sense if thought of as a device for creating 'living pictures' - explorable artifacts for the viewer to play with. Sadly, though, we found that getting the best results out of the Lytro often required rather contrived compositions.

However, we are working a long way from conventional photography and it's not impossible that we haven't 'got it.' When we spoke to Lytro's Founder and CEO, Ren Ng, he made a comparison to Polaroid photography, and we think it's a telling reference point. Polaroids seem ridiculous if judged by the standards of film photography but that didn't mean they weren't capable of offering something interesting and creative. It was a medium that offered something different and it was used both practically and creatively for those differences.

On that basis, there's every chance that the contrivance required to create explorable images might be exactly what appeals to some users.

For now, we think the resolution is too low and that the small sensor means you need rather exaggerated compositions to offer significant refocusability in the resulting file. In the week that Nokia announced a phone with a larger, 41MP sensor, it's hard not to wonder what the Light Field Camera would be like if it was based around that chip. The product would become larger and more expensive and would probably have to sacrifice some of its zoom range but, if that meant higher resolution output and improved subject differentiation, then it might be worthwhile.

John P. Myers
10-25-12, 12:20 AM
Or better yet (maybe), a camera that is never out of focus. It takes pictures, focusing on all things at once. Then, after the the picture is taken, then choose the point of focus that you like best. Focus after the fact!



Ha! Wow can't believe i forgot all about that camera, especially since i wrote an article on it when it was shown at CES. I'm clearly getting old :(
http://www.legitreviews.com/news/12275/

In my article, there's a link to their picture gallery where you can adjust the focus on pictures yourself to see how it works.