At Siggraph 2014, Microsoft Research has unveiled Hyperlapse, an ingenious algorithm that, believe it or not, will actually make you want to watch first-person GoPro footage of climbing, cycling, ...
Wearable cameras like GoPro do a great job of giving a first-person view of extreme sports and other activities, but their often jerky footage can also end up doing a good job of triggering nausea.
Action cameras like the GoPro have made it easy to capture first-person perspectives from daily adventures. But as Microsoft researcher Johannes Kopf discovered, that doesn’t always translate into ...
Good news for extreme sports fans: Microsoft has figured out how to make high-speed video watchable, without making the watcher woozy. If you’ve ever watched a 15-minute recording of someone climbing ...
When Microsoft first unveiled its Hyperlapse software for creating smooth video time-lapses earlier this year, its mobile and desktop releases excluded Apple's platforms. That changes today, with Mac ...
Microsoft today is releasing a beta version of its brand new time-lapse smoothing tool. The Hyperlapse app is available for Android, Windows Phone, and a desktop version, Hyperlapse Pro is available ...
Last August, Microsoft showed off a seemingly magic technology called hyperlapse. The promise of the prototype was to make even the shakiest videos buttery smooth. Within two weeks, Instagram put out ...
Not unlike the elderly, time-lapse videos can be boring and shaky. Microsoft has cobbled together technology that can smooth out the jittery, choppy first-person video footage you’d normally see ...
At Siggraph 2014, Microsoft Research has unveiled Hyperlapse, an ingenious algorithm that will actually make you want to watch first-person GoPro footage. Hyperlapse scans through hours of video ...