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Inspired by this awesomeness (via Microsiervos)

 

Have you ever wondered how will be the average face of the people you know? Yeah, I know, stupid question, but I tend to do those kinds of questions.

 

So I took FaceFinder and ran it across the entire photo collection on my Android phone. That collection goes from mid-2007 onwards (ported from phone to phone). FaceFinder finds and extracts faces from all the provided images, automatically cropping, scaling and saving them on 150x242 pixels thumbnails.

 

Then I wrote a quick and dirty OpenCV-based C program to obtain the average face of all of them. That is, the image resulting from the mean of each pixel of each image on the previous set.

 

The result is what you see here, both the original image and a level-adjusted, edge-sharpened one. Pretty weird, uh?

 

I uploaded both the binary and the code here (under WTFPL), just in the case you are as insane as me. The program is provided only for Linux systems, I'm afraid, but anyone with minimal programming skills should be able to port it to Windows or MacOS without major problems (don't hesitate to email me if you encounter any problem doing that; find contact information on the source itself). Of course, you will need to install OpenCV, both to run and compile.

 

UPDATE: Another version of this, over more than 13,000 images of celebrities.

Our every design carries the best interactive version of how you want to communicate. Even a brief interaction can change the way people think and react to technology.

Find our latest design on mobile app Face Id Login Interaction.

 

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www.linkedin.com/company/terralogic-design-studio

 

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This was at the Ontario Science Centre, in an exhibit on the Science of Spying. It was laid out like you were a spy doin' all sorts of spy things for a spy mission. Kinda fun, in a lame way. Or alternately, kinda lame in a fun way. This was a little thing to pretend like you were getting your face scanned so it could be haxx0red into a tech company's employee database that you worked there to sneak in. I don't entirely know what it had to do with science. It was still kinda neat though.

Arrumando o pc de um cliente e testando o scanner.

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