Blurity, take two!
After a few more months of hard work, most of it outside of the public eye, I am happy to announce Blurity 0.2. No, that’s not 2.0 — it’s 0.2, indicating that this is the much-improved second beta release.
Blurry photos, be gone!
Blurity has a new look, faster interaction, and — most importantly — a much-improved deblurring engine.
Is it perfect? No. Not by a long shot. But I do believe that Blurity now meets the inclusion criteria for the category of “somewhat useful.”
That said, there are some caveats. A few ways to be disappointed:
- Submitting a huge image and expecting processing to be done nearly instantly. It takes a while, as in five or more minutes, to process most images.
- Trying to use it from a non-Webkit smartphone. If your phone runs Android, iPhone OS 3.0+, or WebOS (e.g., the Palm Pre), your experience should be quite decent.
- Expecting miracles. If the blur in the image is extreme, if the noise in the image is crazy, if the image compression is incredibly aggressive, if the image is really small, if the photo is horribly overexposed… well, then, Blurity probably won’t work too well. It works best on moderately blurry, not-too-noisy, not-too-compressed, reasonably large, reasonably well-exposed photographs.
- Selecting a bad focus point. The focus point should be the part of the image that you most wish would have been sharp. The deblurring is applied to the entire image, but the focus point is used to model the blur, so it’s important that you choose something reasonable.
I sincerely appreciate the feedback that you all sent my way after the initial release. Many of the changes in the new version were driven by those comments, and many of the future changes will be linked to comments that I have yet to act upon. Comments on this newer version are appreciated and needed.
With the site now at a point where it isn’t a complete embarrassment, I’m going to begin a marketing push that extends beyond my blogs. Expect to see and hear more in the coming days as I actively promote it for the first time.
Give Blurity a try. Make your blurry photos sharp. Let me know what you think.
(Cross-posted on Northstartup)
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