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Sat, 11 Nov 2006 Apress released a book titled Practical Ocaml and I was excited about the book and read the interview with the author. However, after looking briefly through the comments on Lambda the Ultimate I might have to reconsider purchasing this book.
Ehud
comments: Needless to say, a very disappointing round of comments. The part regarding poor introduction of material then abusing it later on is a serious flaw in my assessment of the book. I have been suffering this problem for years on many different topics (maybe it's just because I'm brain damaged) and it's one of the major things I always am critical about when evaluating the learning process on anything. Crappy treatment of the foundations you are trying to build the rest of your mental model on is terrible. Related
I just took a glance at photosynch and am really impressed with the applications of computer vision and image processing techniques to create a really unique application. The basic idea is to take a pile of photos that are related to each other somehow (imagine taking zillions of pictures of the Taj Mahal from tons of different places) find similar features in all the images and try to reconstruct a mock 3d space that shows the spacial relation between all of your photos. This is really cool as you might be able to create a very interesting photo tour from your photo collection in a 3d navigatable space. Oddly, I was trying to come up with a similar idea to link videos stills in QuickTimeVR movies and try to use the linkable features in QuicktimeVR to provide clickable hotspots that would take you to another photo that was a picture of the same scene however this is far slicker and if it works with very little intervention from the user besides pointing to a pile of photos and letting it do its job that would be great. However, there are still caveats. The whole process takes hours or days to currently do and the current technology preview is only for a pre-rendered project. The true acid test will be in my opinion the ability to just point to a folder of pictures and have it do its job with as little possible human intervention as possible. That is a not a trivial problem but I'm sure we'll see something interesting especially since it has two (very well) known researchers in the computer vision field. I'm really looking forward to the results of their labor. My last question is how many technologies behind this are patented already. It'd be great if it an OSS implementation inspired from this project could be made however patents are a sticky problem.
Try it yourself
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