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Technology
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The pitch is that everything surrounding the subject is extra, and so it doesn't matter if it's the same every time. It's literally throwing that information away in favor of a simplified description. It's extremely processor-intensive data compression.
That is completely terrible, the background is often critical to the photo, there are only a tiny number of photos where the background might not matter.
The author claims to want to help preserve memories, but to me, it seems like this concept would change existing memories.
I use my photo collection as a way to remember events and places, making the memories clearer when I look at them, I can't imagine a time when I would ever want parts of the image to change on it's own from viewing time to viewing time.
The only kind of photos that this could work for would be stock photos, where the customer won't care if the photo convey a memory or not as long as it convey the message they want.
This is a dumb concept, less dumb in some specific areas, but still dumb, it feels kinda like that woman who tried to restore the painting of Jesus in Spain...