rh71

No Lifer
Aug 28, 2001
52,844
1,049
126
You know CSI and all those other television programs are just fiction. You can't just hit 'gweref035 <enter>' and all of a sudden an image is enhanced. If it's not there in the first place, it can't be there just using "unsharp mask" in Photoshop. (I tried) :D
 

randay

Lifer
May 30, 2006
11,018
216
106
ill fix it, gimme a few minutes to run a few filters and get rid of any blurring...
 

rivan

Diamond Member
Jul 8, 2003
9,677
3
81
Originally posted by: rh71
You know CSI and all those other television programs are just fiction. You can't just hit 'gweref035 <enter>' and all of a sudden an image is enhanced. If it's not there in the first place, it can't be there just using "unsharp mask" in Photoshop. (I tried) :D

That makes me crazy when they do that - they're completely retarded with it on "24", too. They just had an episode where they turned what amounted to TV white noise and ended up with a crisp, clear image of one of the CTU people.

And it took less time for the guy to write code to do it - from scratch - than it took for me to write this post.

 

JMWarren

Golden Member
Nov 6, 2003
1,201
0
0
Originally posted by: rivan
Originally posted by: rh71
You know CSI and all those other television programs are just fiction. You can't just hit 'gweref035 <enter>' and all of a sudden an image is enhanced. If it's not there in the first place, it can't be there just using "unsharp mask" in Photoshop. (I tried) :D

That makes me crazy when they do that - they're completely retarded with it on "24", too. They just had an episode where they turned what amounted to TV white noise and ended up with a crisp, clear image of one of the CTU people.

And it took less time for the guy to write code to do it - from scratch - than it took for me to write this post.

I believe that was a corrupted file, being displayed by an image editor in corrupted form. The software merely repaired the corruption while displaying the image...thats a little more feasible, but still out there.