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August 27, 2009 10:06 AM PDT

The 404 413: Where we're carved out of wood

by Justin Yu
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Yesterday's show with guest host Alli went so well that we ask her to help us out again! Today we show off some beautiful fan artwork, run through outdated tech terminology, dispel "Batman 3" rumors about Megan Fox, and more!

We want to give a huge shout-out and thanks to Joe from Honolulu for sending us these two amazing woodcarvings of The 404! We're still blown away by the level of detail in the paintings and the ridiculous amount of time it probably took to make. Best of all, we love that it's a collaborative effort between two 404 fans: Blake Stevenson helped design our logo and Joe just took it to the next level. Cheers to both of you!

We're all a little worried about Chris Nolan's next "Batman" movie. We've been hearing a lot of rumors about the follow-up to last year's "Dark Knight," and even though we think Megan Fox is next level hot, we just can't imagine her as Catwoman. First of all, there are one thousand other characters in the Batman universe, why resurrect the same ones over and over? Let's see a Killer Croc! In other Megan Fox news, gamers will be excited to hear that she will be on Xbox Live on Saturday, August 29 @ 3 p.m. PT to play Gold Members in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen the Game. Cross your fingers and let us know if you actually play her!

Many more crazy stories from the Web in addition to an "Ask The 404" segment on today's show. Thanks for listening, all!


EPISODE 413

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Originally posted at The 404 Podcast
November 19, 2007 4:00 AM PST

'Seam carving' photo resizing now for video

by Stephen Shankland
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MONTEREY, Calif.--In August, researchers unveiled a new way of shrinking or expanding photos called seam carving. Now it turns out the technique applies to video, too.

Ariel Shamir, a senior lecturer at the Efi Arazi School of Computer Science in Israel and a visiting scientist with Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories, showed off the technique at the 6sight digital-imaging conference here last week. (Adobe Systems has hired another seam carving researcher, Shai Avidan.) The technology analyzes a picture for vertical or horizontal "seams"--the term the researchers use to describe a path traversing the photo where pixels are most like their neighbors and therefore least likely to be missed.

The effect is that important areas such as human faces remain intact, while relatively uniform backgrounds such as lawns or skies are squeezed. Seams zig-zag to an extent, for example detouring around clouds through interconnected patches of blue sky. Seam carving works best for photos with multiple subjects separated by an uninteresting background; a subject that occupies the entire frame is likely to be distorted as the image is scaled down.

A related technique called seam insertion reverses the process to add data, giving photos a more spacious look.

During Shamir's demonstration, he widened and narrowed a variety of photos. In addition, he showed how to select specific pixels for priority preservation or removal, in one case excising a girlfriend from a photo the way Soviet censors vanished Leon Trotsky.

And showing off a new twist on the technology, Shamir did the seam carving on a running video of a golfer taking a swing. The golfer remained intact even as the fairway changed from a narrow sliver to a broad tract of green grass. To see the demonstration, check the video above.

The content-aware resizing tool stretched the two narrower images by Japanese artist Utagawa Hiroshige into the adjacent wider versions.

(Credit: Shai Avidan, Ariel Shamir)

One area where seam carving could be useful is in resizing images along with the Web pages they're shown on, for example preserving important parts of a photo even when it's displayed on the tiny screen of some Internet-connected gadget. That could apply to video as well as to still images, though obviously it would require more computational horsepower.

Coming from a journalism background, my instinct is to keep photos generally true to the original, so these automated distortions at first ruffled my feathers.

But on further reflection, it occurred to me that at least when it's working well, seam carving does to an image precisely what my brain does as well: focus on the important bits.

What was that portrait I saw in my art class of youth, an elderly woman seated in black clothing? Her hands and face were painted with detail and care, but the rest of the picture was painted with rough, almost slapdash strokes. But the painting was fine: my mind naturally cared chiefly about the face and hands, the instruments of human expression, and all else was largely optional. It was like a good lossy compression algorithm that saves space by throwing away the data we're not going to miss.

Children, too, instinctively do the same thing. When they draw pictures of people, the features on the face often creep around to occupy the entire head. In reality, you can cover most of your facial features with the palm of one hand, so the significant parts don't actually take up much of the actual surface area. But in children's pictures, anything above the eyes or eyebrows evidently doesn't deserve much attention.

So perhaps seam carving is just an overt manifestation of what we already do ourselves.

Just don't use it to mess with any news sites!

Originally posted at Underexposed
October 25, 2007 1:24 PM PDT

Pumpkin Gutter makes evisceration easy

by Michelle Thatcher
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(Credit: Haunted Bay)

Making a Cylon Jack-o-Lantern will be a piece of cake--er, pie--with the Pumpkin Gutter, a $12 drill attachment that lets you zip through the sticky pumpkin prep stage and get right to carving. All you have to do is cut a hole in the top of the pumpkin, use the dishwasher-safe Pumpkin Gutter to loosen the strings and thin out the walls, and then dump the guts out. The tool even leaves the seeds intact for those who like to turn them into snacks.

We're always wary of seasonal gadgets, which often turn out to be a waste of money. But according to this review on Haunted Bay, the total time from raw pumpkin to simple jack-o-lantern was about 10 minutes, making the Pumpkin Gutter especially handy if you're preparing multiple pumpkins this season.

For a pumpkin-carving tool that might see the light of day at other times of the year, check out Sur La Table's serrated pumpkin carving knife (on sale!), which looks like it would be handy for all manner of thick-skinned fruits and vegetables.

And if you prefer eating pumpkins to carving them, Apartment Therapy: Kitchen has a guide to splitting the smaller, edible pumpkin varieties with a chef's knife, while Star Chefs has articles on pumpkin-friendly wines as well as wine pairings for pumpkin seeds, candy corn, caramel apples, and other Halloween treats.

Originally posted at Appliances & Kitchen Gadgets
September 17, 2007 10:22 AM PDT

Next market for desktop printers: Wood?

by Mike Yamamoto
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(Credit: Fareastgizmos)

If you haven't noticed many advancements in printer technology lately, maybe you're looking looking at the wrong medium. Apparently there's some notable competition going on in the area of printers for wood.

Just as the "Craftsman CompuCarve" is literally making its mark in 3D, Roland Japan is hoping to do the same with its new EGX-350 desktop engraver, which the company claims is 50 percent faster than its earlier model thanks to improvements in its motor and other technologies. Able to produce a "hand-carved look," according to Fareastgizmos, the new machine can even create templates that can be used to press rhinestones into clothing. (Another market for Swarovski to butt into.)

What next? An industrial version that can churn out wooden cars, or course.

June 25, 2007 3:29 PM PDT

A 3D printer for wood

by Mike Yamamoto
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(Credit: SlashGear)

If you like the looks of wooden computers or gadgets but don't want to pay the price, this may be worth the investment for the DIY types out there.

Sears' "Craftsman CompuCarve" can carve complicated patterns in sylvan objects, according to SlashGear, kind of "a printer for wood" that even comes with its own software. (We seem to have a 3D scanner-printer fixation today, for some reason.)

Unfortunately, it's not the cheapest thing in the world, at $1,899. But think of all the money you'll be saving on your next TV alone. Maybe it'll work on pumpkins too.

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