about computers in the right hands,
is the ability to take old grainy images and films and make them more true to how they really looking if they were filmed today, point in case is the
historic 1896 The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station, Denis
Shiryaev has found a way to clarify the world’s earliest films and
their signature grainy textures, and it really works, from the grainy footage he transforms the film is into a 50-second film that suddenly reveals distinct faces of
the passengers scrambling to get on the train, in addition to details on the
locomotive that otherwise were undistinguishable in the original version, according to Peta Pixel, Shiryaev first used Topaz Lab’s Gigapixel AI to
upgrade the film’s resolution to 4K, followed by Google’s DAIN,
which he used to create and add frames to the original file, bringing it to 60
frames per second, made in France, the 35 mm film bears a legend allegedly stating that
the first viewers of the silent production were so frightened by the moving
train that they all ran out of the room, it was created with an all-in-one
camera that served as a printer and projector,
above the original film,
and here is the completed film in all of its new found glory, amazing!
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