View allAll Photos Tagged Facerecognition

High Speed ​​Rail exit, people was forced face recognition to check out.

A courier is using the face recognition and location function of his smartphone in the street to prove to his company that he is somewhere at a certain time. Smartphones have become the electronic shackles of couriers and are becoming those of all people.

Zhapu Rd. & Kunshan Rd., Shanghai

This face is only visible to those living on the

’PLANET OF FANTASY’ .

A Planet far, far away, just somewhere in the universe.

A Planet for humans and animals living together in peace and harmony within untouched nature;

A Planet surrounded by a crystal clear air

A Planet with water as soft and shiny as pure silk;

A Planet where the sun, the moon and the stars show up in the sky all day and night long;

A Planet with stars so close that you can catch them with your hands;

A Planet where fluffy clouds of candy floss may carry you away;

A Planet to dream of, where all your dreams come true

because this

PLANET IS A DREAM - no more than just a dream.

 

Please dream this little dream with me ….. and SMILE !:)

 

MANY HAPPY SMILES ON SATURDAY

 

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ200

ƒ/2.8

14.0 mm

1/250

ISO 200

 

[Text and image copyright Caren (©all rights reserved)]

please respect my copyright : Do not use any image without my previous written authorization, NOT even in social networks. If you want to use a photograph, please contact me!

Bitte mein Copyright (©Alle Rechte vorbehalten) beachten!

Meine Fotos und Texte dürfen ohne meine vorherige und schriftliche Zustimmung NICHT von Dritten verwendet werden, auch nicht in sozialen Netzwerken. Falls Interesse an einem Foto besteht, bitte ich um Kontaktaufnahme!]

 

Dedicated to C.F. (ILYWAMHASAM)

The bossman and the end of this series. When it comes to Blue Moon Camera, Jake really is the alpha and the omega. Very camera-smart, passionate about photography and opinionated. One of those guys you will either love or hate, but most people love him. He really is not anti-digital, that is a common misconception, nor is he a luddite (he is about to be featured on Plates to Pixels, an all on-line photo gallery, and hence in an all digital format). But yeah, Jake really is the man with a plan, or at least if not a plan, then definitely a vision. So if you appreciate Blue Moon Camera and everything or anything that it is, then this is the guy to thank.

Are we to paint what's on the face, what's inside the face, or what's behind it?

-Pablo Picasso

 

Neurobiologists say we recognize faces holistically where individual traits of facial components are visualized but not registered. Instead the details are churned into a complicated visual engram by the fusiform gyrus in the cortex of our brain which is then retained and used to recognize the face once we chance upon it again. Acute or hereditary damage to the fusiform area can lead to prosopagnosia, the condition where one fails to recognize faces. Prosopagnosia patients ‘see’ normally but the information is lost in the broken brain. I have often wondered if a broken heart too can lead to prosopagnosia.

It was a mild and dim day, of which I recall nothing of except your face. I remember… your hair was reined in by the purple bandana. Probably there wasn’t enough time to tend them on that day. You walked upto me and looked at me with utmost tenderness. Your lips were smiling and your dimples were raging a riot as always but I could not trace the tiniest wrinkling in the laugh lines (orbicularis oculi) around your eyes… you were smiling only from the outside. How were you feeling inside? Well… I knew the answer from your eyes where a million sentimental creeks converged from the iris into the grand depths of your pupil. You often joked that your iris would turn deep blue from their usual mahogany when you were happy but became gray upon sadness. True or not, your eyes were indeed gray that day. But that was not the real giveaway of how you felt. Instead, it was a linear sparkle of light that ran parallel to the edge of your lower eyelid. Such sparkles come from tears… tears that try earnestly to hide.

I have never seen you after that day… to be precise, after that moment. Ever since, I have looked for your face in every face I have encountered. Perhaps in searching for you, like patients of prosopagnosia, I have looked lost. Perhaps, I am lost. Lost in the ever gnawing thought where I wonder if those sparkling tear drops ever rolled down as you turned around and walked away.

   

Is your pareidolia working? Do you see the face?

This image is excerpted from a U.S. GAO report:

www.gao.gov/products/GAO-20-479SP

 

FORENSIC TECHNOLOGY: Algorithms Used in Federal Law Enforcement

When using this photo, please attribute: * Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license.

 

NEC is the world leader in biometrics fingerprint and facial matching technology, with recognition from leading independent organizations such as U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NEC’s extensive portfolio solutions range from mobile fingerprint identification, facial recognition to integrated workflow management solutions that provide extensive database matching capabilities across multiple organizations. Learn how some of the nation’s leading agencies trust NEC with their public safety solutions after attending the AFIS Internet Conference.

These are suggestions for A___. The only two correct ones are highlighted on the second row. I got these results after training LR on 95 of her photos taken around the same time. Only two other shots (of the same person) are related. After a bit more training, I and an unrelated man showed up as a match for her. The skulls I can understand, but the tire and Halloween mask? And the monkey is just offensive. LOL!

 

The autocomplete on names is terrible. I type in Mary F which should match to Mary Frances M____ but fills in Mary Fred G____. Fred G____ being another person in my catalog. Seeing it autocomplete and had a similar length name, I pressed Enter before I realized it was wrong. If I type only Mary I get choices of three different Marys. Typing F should give me the proper one. Instead it starts the autocomplete again with F as if for a new name instead of part of the name I am already typing. Very annoying.

 

Overall, the feature is useful and somewhat accurate. I think Google's Picasa was smarter, but that integrates with your Google account and some people dislike online facial recognition. So that is a plus for Lightroom.

 

I wonder if this training can be used across catalogs? Unless the speed improvements they made allow much larger catalogs, I am still going to have my photos in way too many different catalogs.

 

Names are stored as keywords on the photo. I don't really like that. I would prefer a separate name box. Because they are just keywords, there is no indication in Grid View that the photo has names or just other keywords.

 

There are some places it is faster, like switching between photos. But it just got so slow on me I had to kill the program with Task Manager. And now I am stuck with Adobe Creative Cloud that I can't uninstall and seems to be running a Adobe Desktop Services process all the time even though I am using the standalone version.

 

I ran across a message in the Preferences that said GPU Acceleration isn't working for me. Apparently, ATI Radeons have some problem and updating to the latest drivers don't help yet. Although that is bad, it that means my LR should get faster when that is fixed.

When using this photo, please attribute: * Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license.

 

NEC is the world leader in biometrics fingerprint and facial matching technology, with recognition from leading independent organizations such as U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NEC’s extensive portfolio solutions range from mobile fingerprint identification, facial recognition to integrated workflow management solutions that provide extensive database matching capabilities across multiple organizations. Learn how some of the nation’s leading agencies trust NEC with their public safety solutions after attending the AFIS Internet Conference.

If you go to www.myheritage.com/ they have some weird applet (sorry, requires Flash and registration) that will compare a photo you upload and tell you what "celebrities" your face looks the most like.

 

I think it's smoking crack, but it had the following celebrities show up more than once for different photos of me: Norbert Wiener (who?), Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter), Eugene Levy (Yikes!), John Lennon, Allen Ginsberg, Linus Torvalds, Spike Lee (wtf?), Jean-luc Godard, Alanzo Church (?).

 

It's funny since when I had long hair for about a year I got told I looked like Eric Clapton numerous times by different groups of people. The magic matcher didn't seem to think I looked like Clapton. Sorry, I don't think I have any photos of me with long hair since it was pre-cheap digital cameras and I never took photos much since I was lazy and poor.

 

Some of the results I really thought were really insane. Especially when it told me my face looked like women, or people of very different races. Some WTF results that only came up with a photo or so: Cameron Diaz, John Denver, Emilio Estevez, Placido Domingo, Michael Moore, Bae Jong-jun, David Ho, Billie Jean King (do I look like a woman or does she look like a man?). It seemed to like matching me to people from asia when it got the wrong race, Spike Lee was a prominent and consistent wrong-race match, tho (???).

 

I tried a photo Steve took of me with Andrea M. at dinner. It seemed to think she looked like either Natalie Portman, Marco Van Basten (who is this guy?), Grace Kelly, Katherine Hepburn or Eminem. Yeah, I can see how Grace Kelly, Natalie Portman and Eminem look SOOO similar. WTF?

Pavillon Sainte-Catherine de l'UQAM, Montréal

 

Dans le cadre du parcours d'art public KM3

 

« L’installation interactive Assemblée redondante utilise des techniques biométriques pour détecter et enregistrer les visages des passants de la rue Sainte-Catherine. Disposés sur six vitrines, ces miroirs numériques superposent les traits de ceux qui les contemplent avec ceux des précédents spectateurs, créant d’évanescents portraits composites, à cheval entre le passé et le présent. Rafael Lozano-Hemmer détourne ici les technologies de reconnaissance faciale : il transforme la promenade en une plateforme publique d’autoportraits collectifs sans identités propres.

 

HORAIRE

 

Dim. à mer. : 10 h à 22 h

Jeu. à sam. : 10 h à 23 h

 

BIOGRAPHIE

 

Rafael Lozano-Hemmer est né à Mexico en 1967. Il a développé une pratique artistique autour du concept d'architecture relationnelle, s’attachant à détourner l'usager d’un environnement urbain familier tout en lui proposant une relecture de ce même lieu.

 

Son travail propose des expériences sociales où performances et rencontres sont au rendez-vous à travers l’intervention des nouvelles technologies. Ses projets d’envergure sont inspirés par la fantasmagorie, le carnaval et l’animatronique. À plus petite échelle, ses installations et impressions numériques explorent quant à elles les thèmes de la perception et de la surveillance.

 

En 2007, Lozano-Hemmer a été le premier artiste à représenter officiellement le Mexique à la Biennale de Venise. Il a également participé aux biennales de Sydney, Liverpool, Shanghai, Istanbul, Séville, Séoul, La Havane, Nouvelle-Orléans, Singapour et Moscou. Il a reçu deux prix de la BAFTA (British Academy of Film and Television Arts, Londres), un Nica d’or aux Prix Ars Electronica (Autriche), un Rave Award du magazine Wired, un Trophée des Lumières (Lyon) et un prix international de la Fondation du Bauhaus, à Dessau (Allemagne).

 

CRÉDITS

 

Concept et direction : Rafael Lozano-Hemmer Programmation : Stephan Schulz

Soutien à la production : Karine Charbonneau, Miguel Legault, Guillaume Tremblay, Kitae Kim, Marc Lavallée, Carolina Murillo-Morales et Andreas Schmelas »

 

km3.quartierdesspectacles.com/fr/oeuvre/assemblee-redondante

When using this photo, please attribute: * Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license.

 

NEC is the world leader in biometrics fingerprint and facial matching technology, with recognition from leading independent organizations such as U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NEC’s extensive portfolio solutions range from mobile fingerprint identification, facial recognition to integrated workflow management solutions that provide extensive database matching capabilities across multiple organizations. Learn how some of the nation’s leading agencies trust NEC with their public safety solutions after attending the AFIS Internet Conference.

I had a quick play about with the facial recognition on 'MyHeritage'(.com) and apparently I look 71% like a woman. Hurrah.

When using this photo, please attribute: * Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license.

 

NEC is the world leader in biometrics fingerprint and facial matching technology, with recognition from leading independent organizations such as U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NEC’s extensive portfolio solutions range from mobile fingerprint identification, facial recognition to integrated workflow management solutions that provide extensive database matching capabilities across multiple organizations. Learn how some of the nation’s leading agencies trust NEC with their public safety solutions after attending the AFIS Internet Conference.

When using this photo, please attribute: * Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license.

 

NEC is the world leader in biometrics fingerprint and facial matching technology, with recognition from leading independent organizations such as U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). NEC’s extensive portfolio solutions range from mobile fingerprint identification, facial recognition to integrated workflow management solutions that provide extensive database matching capabilities across multiple organizations. Learn how some of the nation’s leading agencies trust NEC with their public safety solutions after attending the AFIS Internet Conference.

Artificial intelligence, automation and machine learning isometric infographic with text

i've never been much of a girly-girl and perhaps just as well.

 

jennifer esperanza got me started on this!

 

here are two other's i tried - this is totally cracking me up!

www.myheritagefiles.com/H/storage/site1/files/41/49/22/41...

 

www.myheritagefiles.com/H/storage/site1/files/41/36/92/41...

 

donny osmand? condi rice? james joyce? aretha franklin? harry truman? julia roberts? chuck heston? alec baldwin? huh.

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always.

"Discover your player's celebrity doppleganger by uploading your player photo to myheritage.com (you may use bugmenot if you don't want to register). The site will analyze your face and determine which celebrities you most resemble. It will also add you to an anti-terrorist government database thereby preventing you from taking commercial airline flights for the rest of your life."

Are you a member of the FCB group on LinkedIn ?

 

If you are and you have a face on your LinkedIn profile picture, chances are you are part of this picture!!

 

Try and find yourself!!

 

Check more info on this picture at www.mosaicyourself.com/fcb-linkedin

 

We are promoting our Face Photomosaics at MosaicYourself, and the integration with Linked In, so consider making a custom mosaic for your company, your friends, farewells or other occasions, visit our image gallery and video gallery.

 

The image below features 117 different faces extracted from the FCB supporter group on LinkedIn.

 

This image shows a JPEG compressed and 40% reduced in size (resolution) to appreciate the big pictures. Check a detail of this photomosaic on our photostream. That one shows a detail of the full resolution of the mosaic where the quality of the tiles can be appreciated.

 

Place an order soon for one of these amazing mosaics!!

 

Late 2010 Picasa introduced a new app or module..."Face Recognition"...if executed it crowls through all image files on your working disc...tracing faces and producing thumbnails of results....wonder how many thousand faces Picasa FR discovers.....test it...it's great!

Showing the simple 60 line python program in action, capturing webcam footage, scanning it for faces and augmenting the footage with green rectangles around the faces

Playing around with www.photofunia.com which I discovered via a 'tagged challenge'

Picture of the Arduino made out of the faces of the members of the Arduino Playground group on LinkedIn.

 

Read more about the picture at www.mosaicyourself.com/ArduinoFaces

iPhoto face recognition again

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always.

MyHeritage.com celebrity face recognition haha

"MyHeritage.com is one of the world's first services to apply advanced face recognition technology to personal photos and family history; and it's free!"

 

and these are my results ;)

Playing around with celebrity face matching.

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always. This is a closeup of a knife handle.

Overall view of the Epiphany Mosaic made by mosaicyourself, 213 unique face compose a picture of the three kings (or threw wise men) that visit Jesus on January 6th,

 

See more details at

www.mosaicyourself.com/threekings

 

Visit us at

www.mosaicyourself.com

I'm having trouble getting this thing right. I mean, its hard to get some things right when you're always working them out on your own. LCDs are really quite hard to photograph.

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always. Although I guess that is a face.

You can always make a face of faces. Pick a tile and make it the whole picture.

You can get the fractal effect, so you can find the background picture as a tile!

 

It uses the same tiles as the Surfer Dude! mosaic. You can read more on the kind of tiles you can find in this mosaic there. Surprise surprise!!

 

This is a good example of how the same tiles can create different mosaics.

 

Visit www.mosaicyourself.com for more info on this mosaic.

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always.

Apple's new iPhoto '09 has a face recognition feature that generally works pretty well. But not always. This is some melting snow on our street.

Yes, you can make an awesome and original wedding invitation out of your Flickr or Facebook pics. From your digital library too!!

This particular one is made of bride's and groom's faces to configure an overall couple background.

Get that original customized picture from MosaicYourself!!!

 

Visit www.mosaicyourself.com for more info on this mosaic.

I have to thank kk for this time waster (see his post flickr.com/photos/kk/229515049/?#comment72157594260818251) though it seems really off on me.

 

When my hair was shorter - I used to get Sarah McLachlan and Dana Delaney. Now I get Jenna Elfman and Brooke Burns. Eek gad. Think it is time to cut the 'do again. :/

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