Re: About "automatic" color management
Re: About "automatic" color management
- Subject: Re: About "automatic" color management
- From: edmund ronald <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2010 21:37:32 +0200
Well, I published about 20 papers in AI-related research, so I am
biased. But here is a short list of everyday things which come from
AI:
- automatic translation (eg. Google translate)
- speech recognition on voice servers
- computer dictation
- OCR (software that reads text that is printed)
- handwriting recognition (tablet PCs, phones)
- chinese/japanese gestural character entry and recognition
- chess playing computer software
- First person shooter monsters and computer opponents
- the software that banks and hedge funds use to screw normal
investors by trading ahead of them.
- the software used in places like Irak to keep drones stable when
they patrol so that human pilots can make the important decisions
- the software used to detect patterns in communications and decide
that you should be checked carefully at the airport and taken to a
back room
I think that some automation of color management will happen. Consumer
cameras can now do a lot of automatic colorand tone adjustment which
pro cameras cannot, and quite soon equivalent capabilities will spill
over into the cheaper web and print publication arena. Pro
photographers will get help with local inkjet printing soon, CMYK may
wait until the last print trade union collapses.
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 7:57 PM, Marco Ugolini <email@hidden> wrote:
> Edmund Ronald wrote:
>
>>embedded sensors will be a good start
>
> Artificial intelligence would be another.
>
> How long have we heard about that one? How far have we come?
>
> Marco
>
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