On Tue, 10 May 2005, E.Chalaron wrote:
> > Good to hear that you are back in action after the system/disk crash
>
> Wait there is more I will upgrade another one soon :-)
You're not going to wait for it to crash? :)
> Cool, I need to work on Cb then. Which is very grainy on ol
> Good to hear that you are back in action after the system/disk crash
> of not too long ago.
Wait there is more I will upgrade another one soon :-)
> http://www.mir.com/DMG/ycbcr.html
RTFM Edouard, RTFM
> What is commonly called "YUV" is really Y'CbCr where Cb
On Tue, 10 May 2005, E.Chalaron wrote:
> Still on my way to ge tthe best picts possible from my movies.
Good to hear that you are back in action after the system/disk crash
of not too long ago.
> Now that I know that one can denoise the chroma and not the luma, I was
> wonder
Hi all
Still on my way to ge tthe best picts possible from my movies.
Now that I know that one can denoise the chroma and not the luma, I was
wondering what "layer" (U or V) preferentially decribes the blue tones ?
Thanks
E
---
This SF.Net ema
Howdy -
What a difference a VCR makes!
The JVC S-VHS deck I'd been using for several years "wore out" (a LOT
of tapes, most of which were in bad shape, went thru it) - blurry
picture and the brightness was gone (Y' above 164 was rolled way off).
So, until
On Mon, 9 May 2005, Dik Takken wrote:
> Indeed, it's a consumer mini-DV camera.
Ok - that's what I thought. Mine's similar (but I went for the
1/4.7" CCD model - it's somewhat better than the 1/6" one but low
light shooting is still problematic).
> I did see this new s
On Sat, 7 May 2005, Steven M. Schultz wrote:
(like inside my home) there is a *lot* of chroma noise in the recordings:
On a 100% grey background you can see small patches of slightly red
colored pixels that appear at random and never last longer than 1 frame.
CCD noise :(Small CCDs (consume