Software development industry analysis by Larry O'Brien, the former editor of Software Development and Computer Language
Friday, September 19, 2003

Your tax dollars at work: the latest PC Magazine reports "Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory have developed software that can detect extremely tiny differences -- smaller than a fraction of a pixel -- between two digital images...."

Update: PC Mag's description is wildly inaccurate. The INEEL "breakthrough" is a program that rapidly aligns two digital images and then alternates them on-screen, which causes non-matched pixels to flicker, at which point the human observer notes the differences rapidly. The real impressive part is that "The alignment compensates for differences in camera angle, height, zoom or other distractions that previously confounded flip-flop comparisons."

Friday, September 19, 2003 4:23:11 AM (Hawaiian Standard Time, UTC-10:00) |  Disqus link  | #
Search
About Larry...
Flickr photostream
Subscribe: RSS 2.0 Atom 1.0
Popular Articles
Programming Sabre with Java, C#, and XML
Genetic Programming in C#
15 Exercises To Know A Programming Language
Top 10 Things I've Learned About Computers From the Movies and Any Episode of "24"
Recently Published Articles
HI
KonaKoder
Categories
Archive
Admin Login
Sign In
Toolroll