Posted by Richard Crowley on 04/01/07 03:17
"Jeff Adams" wrote ...
> Thanks for the replys but you're misunderstanding
> what i need.
Perhaps nobody understood what you need because
you didn't explain what you were talking about.
> What I'm
> talking about was technology originally pioneer by NASA.
> Basically it motion tracks the frames before and after and
> figures out where those pixels would go on the current frame.
> Thus resulting in a really high resolution image. What I'm
> talking about is creating images that are like 2000 pixels
> across with good clarity.
That is the technology used by the "Snappy" video image
capture hardware made by Play Inc. It takes MOVING
video of a STATIC scene and averages over many frames
to derive a much higher resolution image. Note that it
requires running video of an unmoving shot (like a camera
aimed at a still-life scene). It doesn't work on conventional
moving video of moving images.
Play Inc. also made another innovative product called
"Trinity". Alas the company went out of business when
the CEO (and inventor) died.
> A still from premiere is simply blown up, which is not
> what I want. The only commercial product I've found is
> "Video Pics" which did exactly what I wanted. But it's no
> longer made. So basically what I'm understanding is that
> no one currently makes such a product?
Apparently not. Perhaps it is too much of a "niche" product
to be viable commercially. It isn't very common that you
have moving video of a static shot, so the potential market
may be too small.
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