EPFL spinoff turns thousands of 2D photos into 3D images
May 11, 2011
Researchers in EPFL’s Computer Vision Laboratory developed a computer-based modeling service that generates a 3D image from up to thousands of 2D shots, with all the processing done in the cloud.
Since April, the EPFL startup Pix4D has been offering the modeling service with a fourth dimension: time. Now, individuals and small businesses looking for fast, cheap, large-scale 3D models can get them without investing in heavy processing, the company states.
With Pix4D, users upload a series of photos of an object, and within 30 minutes they have a 3D image. The software defines “points of interest” from among the photos, or common points of high-contrast pixels. Next, the program pastes the images together seamlessly by matching up the points of interest. Much in the same way our two eyes work together to calculate depth, the software computes the distance and angle between two or more photos and lays the image over the model appropriately, creating a highly accurate 3D model that avoids the time intensive, “point by point” wireframe method.
With Pix4D’s 3D models, you can navigate in all directions as well as change the date on a timeline to see what a place looked like at different times of the year. The company is collaborating with several drone makers (including another EPFL startup,senseFly) to market their software as a package with senseFly’s micro aerial vehicles, or autonomous drones.
Pix4D’s time element avoids waiting for Google to update its satellite data or for an expensive plane to fly by and take high-resolution photos. Farmers, for example, can now send relatively inexpensive flying drones into the air to take pictures as often as they like, allowing them to survey the evolution of their crops over large distances and long periods of time. And since the calculations are done on a cloud server, the client doesn’t need a powerful computer of his or her own.
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Comments (1)
by Ralph Dratman
Privacy is out. Knowledge is in. That’s the way it was in the tribal village, and that’s how it will be in big areas of our world before too long. A few drones zipping around our neighborhoods all the time will usher in a hell of a lot of scary new knowledge, all of which must be kept publicly available in raw form. There must be no private or government hold on such universal information.
One little difficulty is that the tribal village is on the order of tens or hundreds of people, while our electronic environment is on the order of millions or tens of millions of e-minds. That change in degree is immediately a change in kind.
That many virtual beings shed a lot of virtual bugs. As a result we badly need a virtual immune system. Too bad no one knows how to build one yet. To do so, we need a fundamentally new hardware architecture for information exchange. Software is already far too slow and serial to cope with the onslaught of toxins and pests.