DX Analytics: Difference between revisions

From Computer Laboratory Group Design Projects
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Was: [[Vladimir Vilde]]
Original contact Vladimir Vilde <vlmv2@cam.ac.uk>
 
Vladimir Vilde <vlmv2@cam.ac.uk>


Client: vladimir.vilde@dxan.co.uk
Client: vladimir.vilde@dxan.co.uk


Suggestion: Zoom Into Books
Suggestion: [[Zoom into Books]]


Art and travel books often have beautiful images, but it’s frustrating that you can’t pinch to zoom as you would with a phone, to see arbitrarily high resolution details. The purpose of this project is to identify those times when a picture in a book or magazine corresponds to an existing high resolution image that is available online. Your Android app should work in augmented reality style, starting with a view of the book through the phone camera, but then seamlessly zooming by substituting high-resolution online data.
Art and travel books often have beautiful images, but it’s frustrating that you can’t pinch to zoom as you would with a phone, to see arbitrarily high resolution details. The purpose of this project is to identify those times when a picture in a book or magazine corresponds to an existing high resolution image that is available online. Your Android app should work in augmented reality style, starting with a view of the book through the phone camera, but then seamlessly zooming by substituting high-resolution online data.

Latest revision as of 16:52, 27 October 2020

Original contact Vladimir Vilde <vlmv2@cam.ac.uk>

Client: vladimir.vilde@dxan.co.uk

Suggestion: Zoom into Books

Art and travel books often have beautiful images, but it’s frustrating that you can’t pinch to zoom as you would with a phone, to see arbitrarily high resolution details. The purpose of this project is to identify those times when a picture in a book or magazine corresponds to an existing high resolution image that is available online. Your Android app should work in augmented reality style, starting with a view of the book through the phone camera, but then seamlessly zooming by substituting high-resolution online data.