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Ian Forrester

Face Recognition TV - 2014 | concept | Red Dot Design Award for Design Concepts - 0 views

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    This television uses facial recognition technology to locate its viewer, then rotates its screen to face them.
Ian Forrester

Mozilla: Common Voice - 0 views

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    "Voice is natural, voice is human. That's why we're fascinated with creating usable voice technology for our machines. But most of that technology is locked up in a few big corporations and isn't available to the majority of developers. We think that stifles innovation so we're launching Project Common Voice, a project to help make voice recognition open to everyone. Now you can donate your voice to help us build an open-source voice recognition engine that anyone can use to make innovative apps for devices and the web."
Ian Forrester

Easily recognize famous individuals and celebrities using Amazon Rekognition - 0 views

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    "Amazon Rekognition to detect and recognize hundreds of thousands of individuals who are famous, noteworthy, or prominent in their field, from movies, television, politics, business, and sports. The Celebrity Recognition feature allows you to index and quickly search digital image libraries for celebrities based on your particular interest"
Ian Forrester

Smile TV works only when you smile / by @_davidhedberg - 1 views

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    Recent Royal College of Art (RCA) design graduate David Hedberg's Smile TV is more than a loving homage to the good old 'campfire inside the living room.' Made from an open frame CRT monitor and equipped with a computer vision system, the unsuspecting television set turns the medium's engagement pattern on its head: instead of making you smile at on-screen silliness, you have to "smile to watch." Only when you do - and for as long as you do - will Smile TV reveal its otherwise scrambled broadcast. "This project grew out from experimenting with facial recognition and image manipulation," Hedberg explains over email.
Ian Forrester

Perceptive media: machine perception and human computer interaction - 0 views

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    Computer vision has made significant progress in recent decades, with steady improvements in the performance and robustness of computational methods for real-time detection, recognition, tracking, and modeling
Ian Forrester

Disney's Next Movie Could Be Watching You, Too - 0 views

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    "The company's research arm is experimenting with facial recognition to gauge how audiences react. "
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