Comment by secretsatan
10 hours ago
Couldn’t you just use iphone pros for this? I developed an app specifically for photogrammetry capture using AR and the depth sensor as it seemed like a cheap alternative.
EDIT: I realize a phone is not on the same level as a red camera, but i just saw iphones as a massively cheaper option to alternatives in the field i worked in.
ASAP Rocky has a fervent fanbase who's been anticipating this album. So I'm assuming that whatever record label he's signed to gave him the budget.
And when I think back to another iconic hip hop (iconic that genre) video where they used practical effects and military helicopters chasing speedboats in the waters off of Santa Monica...I bet they had change to spear.
Is there any reason to think https://thebaffler.com/salvos/the-problem-with-music doesn't apply here?
A single camera only captures the side of the object facing the camera. Knowing how far away that camera facing side of a Rubik's Cube help if you were making educated guesses(novel view synthesis), but it won't solve the problem of actually photographing the backside.
There are usually six sides on a cube, which means you need minimum six iPhone around an object to capture all sides of it to be able to then freely move around it. You might as well seek open-source alternatives than relying on Apple surprise boxes for that.
In cases where your subject would be static, such as it being a building, then you can wave around a single iPhone for the same effect for a result comparable to more expensive rigs, of course.
I think it's because they already had proven capture hardware, harvest, and processing workflows.
But yes, you can easily use iPhones for this now.
Looks great by the way, i was wondering if there’s a file format for volumetric video captures
https://developer.apple.com/av-foundation/
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/spatial/
Edit: As I'm digging, this seems to be focused on stereoscopic video as opposed to actual point clouds. It appears applications like cinematic mode use a monocular depth map, and their lidar outputs raw point cloud data.
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Some companies have a proprietary file format for compressed 4D Gaussian splatting. For example: https://www.gracia.ai and https://www.4dv.ai.
Check this project, for example: https://zju3dv.github.io/freetimegs/
Unfortunately, these formats are currently closed behind cloud processing so adoption is a rather low.
Before Gaussian splatting, textured mesh caches would be used for volumetric video (e.g. Alembic geometry).
Recording pointclouds over time i guess i mean. I’m not going to pretend to understand video compression, but could it be possible to do the following movement aspect in 3d the same as 2d?
Why would they go for the cheapest option?
It was more the point that technology is much cheaper. The company i worked for had completely missed it while trying to develop in house solutions.