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Live from DEMOfall: Tribeca Labs bring interesting twist to photo space

Written by Alex Iskold / September 26, 2006 2:59 PM / 1 Comments

Blogged Live from DEMOfall by Alex Iskold

Tribeca Labs launched an interesting photo service at DEMO, focused on helping you preserve your digital photos. Their application continuously crawls your hard drive and when it finds a photo it does a few interesting things. Firstly by using adaptive imaging, Photobot automatically improves the quality of the photo. Without any user involvement, the Photobot reduces red eye, improves contrast and gives pictures vibrant, live-like color. As the company puts it: "it makes bad photos good and good photos even better."

Then the software does something unexpected and very interesting - it archives a copy of the photograph to a remote vault located in, literally, a bank in Switzerland. Called 'Swiss picture bank', this super secure storage is located next to famous Swiss currency vaults. All pictures are easily accessible online via a nice and simple web site. The company's message: "Preserve your memories for generations". This is surely an interesting twist and a valuable add on to the growing number of photo applications and services.


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  • As someone with an interest in photography, I shudder at AI automatic correction. It may make bad photos better, but good photos even better? I love automatic things, and hate correcting endless streams of photos, but the only good automation is the kind that is done under your supervision. Leaving it to crawl on its own to make its own decisions about what can be improved, as I said, makes me shudder. Even for mom and dad's photo's this seems risky.

    Also, the demo on their site isn't playing for me.

    Posted by: Klim | September 26, 2006 11:34 PM




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