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Alex Wilhelm
Alex Wilhelm is a San Francisco-based writer. You can find Alex on Twitter, and on Facebook. You can reach Alex via email at [email protected] Alex Wilhelm is a San Francisco-based writer. You can find Alex on Twitter, and on Facebook. You can reach Alex via email at [email protected]
In our continuing coverage of Microsoft Research projects, today we bring you an important update to a piece of software that we have not covered before: ICE.
ICE, or Microsoft’s Image Composite Editor, is a ‘panoramic image stitcher.’ Or, to put it more simply, ICE is an app that will take a set of photos that overlap and create a single, unified image from them. This is useful if you have a camera in a single spot over time, for example, to track the motion of a person through the frame.
Snowboarding magazines are famous for this sort of shot, showing an athlete in all stages of a jump. What follows is an image that shows off what the latest version of ICE can do:
The new version includes lens vignetting correction as well, helping to smooth the brightness of a photo out, making for a better final result. ICE 1.42 also includes a new blending engine, which reduces chop between input images.
All told, the new ICE is a very capable tool for the amateur photographer looking to put some extra spice into their next photo shoot. ICE is free and you can grab it here for Windows.
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